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PAGE TWO. 


BACHELOR OF THE SCIENCE OF 
AGRICULTURE atte 


owe. John Walla 
eles, Cyril Kay. ~ 
“Kelley, Cyril Cliffor 

Lewis, Norman Gayhell.” 
| McAra, Malcolm James. pie 
“Malaher, Wilfrid - Gordon. : ‘ 
Mossman, Carl: Clark. - ) ; 
ibbcenoay vinaiuianee Lindsay. 


| THE GATEWAY, 
Wade grades Newspaper published 
weekly by the Students’ Union 
of the University of Alberta 


(Continued fob Page One) 
MASTER OF SCIENCE IN AGRICUL- 
TURE 


Brown, William Rédman, BSA. : 
Huskins, Charles Leonard, BaA. 
Hearle, Eric, B.S.A.- : 
Mather, Thomas Herbert, BSA. 


BACHELOR OF. of SeIRNCE NA AGRICUL: 

; Sc. 

Cormack, eae Wyld. 

Devlin, Thomas Parker. * 

Gentleman, William Donald. 
Grindley, Thomas William, B.A. — 
‘Leahey, Alfred. ls ht NS 
Mail, George Allen. A 

: Mawdsley, Robert. Watson, 

’ Richert, Charles Henry. : 
‘Smith, Wesley Gordon. 

- Thompson, Norman Grainger.” 
Thomaon, Leonard Baden. 


a bgetigh i ata 
Bilitorin-Chiet..0, Wesley atts 7 : 
The Hon. illiam -Gord 
“Associate Bditor........Ken, MacKenzie mutta Eta Frederick William “Gordon 
News Hditor......Walter Herbert, B. A. 
Business. Manager........ E. B. Wilson 
Advertising Manager......Stanley Ross 


Circulation Manager......Anna Wilson 


: FOR: THE DEGREE, 0 OF BACHELOR 


Armstrong, Helen Sinclair. 

Buckley, Beatrice Georgina. 

Bullard, Edwina Grace, 

Castor, Jessie Irene. 

Clermont, Eugenie Marie, 

Eubank, ‘Edna Merle. ; 

Evans, Hileen Louise. ei 

Haw, Olive Vera (with First Rank 
Honours in English). 

MeRitrick, Jean Kathleen (with Second 
Rank Honours in Philosophy). 

Matthews, Eleanor Catherine. 

Matthias, Margaret Hannah. — 

Millar, Jean Malcolm. 

Morrow, Mertle Laura. 

Silverthorp, Mamie Elizabeth, 

Smith, Doroth fa Lillian (with First Rank 
Honours in English 

Studholme, Bethe "Grace. 

Studholme, Reva Marie. 

Willison, Mary Charlotte. 

Ainlay, Harry Dean. 

Bloor, William piebly Keen. 

Bright, Aubrey 


} wisn) Edgar, Bertha ean “Orial. 
Staff for this issue: W. T. Watts, Farnalls, Dorothy. 
Walter Herbert, E. RB. ‘Wilson, Don 


MeKenzie, Freda Smith, 


THE SCIENCE OF AGRICULTURE 
Ce AS), AD EUNDEM 


Hearle, 


CONVOCATION 


Convocation, to those ho have 
witnessed many, may be nothing 
more than an annual ceremony for 
conferring degrees and prizes. To 
others, it is a great milestone in their 
lives; the point where they leave 
‘behind their days of ardent book- Cairne: Jamca, Mitchell, 
study and -vyenture forth into the arta oceee ihc 
all, human nature,‘and make a place} Flack, Charles Ruthven. 


, John Wilson, 
world to study the greatest course of Gitfen, John yieat: 


! ; a Grindley, Frank Llewellyn, 
for themselves. They have er Heat Sonica: Howse: 
reached their goal of “education,” in MacDonald Shirley, Cragin: 
. c ug n, ohn aroid. 
the technical sense. They are pro- McNeill, Duncan Edward ves. 
; } a itche ober’ chmon. 
fessional men or women, with de ese William Stanley: 
grees. They have now to learn that Rusk, Pos perarell 
hogs o . * war Sung. 
the initials after their names will not Welnts, Mose at Bs 
not ‘of -wei itfor awa iam. ai 
carry such a great amount of weight Wilson, Ernest Brown. . 
among men; that those initials have 


to be supplemented by personality,| for THE. DI DEGREE OF BACHELOR 


ambition, perseverance and honest Se Wake ey, AR 
dealing. Their years at the Univer-| Kennedy, Anne. : 


: ; ‘ : Baldwin, Arthur Vawdrey. 
sity have done much to develop their Ball, Leslie Victor. 


characters, and upon those who have eas Waites eae (with First Rank 
i" tt n emis 
taken the fullest advantage of those} Ycnmann, Adolph John Victor. 


, Robert Royer. 
years will be impressed the spirit of png abpaied ski 


their Alma Mater. If graduates ‘from | Waines, Francis Douglas. 
* Walker, Lynwood Arthur. =. 
Alberta will all carry out the pursuit| Watters, George. Theodore. 


of “Quaecumque Vera,” they will not| Watts, George Wesley Townsend. 


suffer in the eyes of men. 
é y . . HE DEGREE OF Late ht ase 
Much advice will be given to the pan a F ARTS, AD EUN 


new alumni as they are about to leave hoe” Harriet. 

‘Bagnall, Frederick. 
our halls, but it will all be of the Miller George Mitchel. : 
same tenor. Kipling, in addressing | Bosteee: Ethel Oliphint. 


the students of St. Andrews, at con-| Robertson, George William 
ae % 7 Robinson, Claud Hill. 
vocation, laid stress on the impoxt-| Rosborough, Arthur Edward. 


ance of “Independence,” Barrie wey, Pasi ig lakh : 
urged that the young men and women 
of the same university have “Cour-|} For THE DEGREE OF B.Sc. IN ARTS, 
‘age’ above all things in the battle for AD EUNDEM 
a place in the sun. Convocation ad- 
‘dresses have always been of a most FOR THE DEGREE OF B ACHELOR 
inspiring nature, born as they are of ee ee alarms 
the spirit of a great occasion. It Bissett, Clifford, Sifton 

i j iri uggan, Kenne rice, 
ae sudeed. De: an inspiring: Sr ent English, John Hascall Frederick. — 
which would move mien to speak McClung, Janes Glee, 
words like those of Barrie when he| giepneng, Sydney Campbell. 
said to ‘the red gowns of St. An- 
drews’: “God gave us memories so BSc. IN HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 

be Clarke, Margaret Elizabeth. 

that we might have rises in Decem ieewacin: Paviie ene 
ber.’ The U of A. has done much] Prevey, Esther Elizabeth. 
if all those who graduate from her; Skene Jean Isabel McGregor. 
halls will look back upon their uni- a ou aay. 
versity days as roses in their lives. Becker Ruth, 


Goodall, Annie McClean. 
Marshall, Alice Louisa. 


a 
FOR THE DEGREE ar BACHELOR 


Fagan, Ethel pares 
Baker, Morris Louis. 
Bramley-Moore, Alfred Gordon, B.A. 
Brown, James, B.A. 


tinction). 
Butchart, Elwood Alexander, ‘tnd 
Day, Edgerton Winnett. 
Downing, Perey William” 
Driscoll, John Russell Cameron. 
Gale, Henry Longhurst. 
Jones, Luther. 
Lefsrud, Sigurd. 
Mahaffy, James Cavan. 
Miller, Abe William. — 
Poole, William Newton. 
Rudd, Frederick Albert, B.A. - 
Simmons, Ronald Beverley. 
Thom, John MacGregor. 


FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR 
OF MEDICINE nies 
MeGregor, Leone Clara, 
Bercoy, Harry Aaron. 
Badie, William Worth. 
Glenn, John Stuart, B.A: 
Grimson, Julius Caesar. 
Law, Frank. . oe 
Lee, Carlton George. — 
Lewis, George Morris. 
Liesemer, Eldon John. — 
Morrow, Robert John. © 
Weston, Daniel Tuttle. 


FOR ee DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF 


Harris, Leonard Christopher, 

Huckell, Graham, M.D., C. 

\ Thompson,’ Gordon Hdward, M.D. C.M. 
Young, Morley Aen Ryerson, M. 


Pe ee 


OMA) 
Becker, Charles Maires. 
Boyce, William John. 
Carrigan, Thomas James. 
Holmes, Albert Wilfred. 
Meters, Lawrence Richard. 
Mitchell, Lorne Francis. 
Monaghan, William John. 
Nixon, Murray Francis. 
Shipley, Mitatbeaee Alan. 


PROFESSIONAL RESULTS 


Affiliated Professicnal Societies + 

me" IN. DECEMBER, 1924 
OR canny 

Ferguson, Elizabeth. 


n, George Patterson. 
ats . IN ¥, 1925 


Nursing 


| Brandt, BE. E.; Campbell, M.; Close, 8. 


Grimson, Ou: cs re Pre Ts Haslam, E. 


eridge, E. J.; Long, EB. B.; Loutil, 


bs etek Se D. E.; McGillivray, E. 
Maxwell, 1. H ; Morrison, F. M.; Miles, 
1s Be Miehlhansen, M. V.; Munshaw, M 
Murray, M. 0.; Ness, J.; Newsham, 8. M. ‘ 
Poole, B.; Payzant, G. AL; Popplewell, M. 


Hardin, Harry Feibel. . 3 Wald- 

‘APPRECIATION tana Claida- ene Ets Twas G; Watson, H. A ch 
Without the valuable assistance of |. SES ioae RT rae Aa 
many willing and efficient volunteers B.Sc. IN CIVIL ENGINEERING C. K. JOHNS WINS 


i ; fo j it Davidson, William McCartney. 
it would have been impossible for Macdonald, James Dougald: assaton 


The Gateway to have published this| B.Sc. IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING 


; . ‘ hur Valentine. 
issue. With many members of its] Seaviy fr Jona. 


,» John Al di 
regular staff absent, The Gateway Gadebon si iepows atpas 
~ has been handicapped, and only the 


$500 SCHOLARSHIP 


aid which was so willingly given en- B.Sc. IN MINING ENGINEERING ed Annually to College fe Gaye 
abled us to get the issue out on time.| Ethridge, Frederick Messenger. culture, Allows Year's Study — 
Lawton, Wilfred Russell. at Macdonald College 


We wish to gratefully acknowledge| witon-clark, Harry. 
the services of the following, who - 
gave us unselfishly of their time and B.Sc. IN ENGINEERING PHYSICS 
energies for our convocation issue;| Gowan, Edward Hunter, B. Snes Ane 
_ Misses Mary Willison, Esther Prevey,|~ =. ~—~—=<C<~C;«C;737«] 3A 
Marilda Clermont, Eugenie Cler- sible if the students are well inform- 
mont, Bea Buckley and Olive Haw, ed on the various organizations. The 
and Bill Watson, Fred Barclay, A. V. necessary information is contained in 
Baldwin, Cliff Underwood and Rache| Mr. Levey’s report and should be 
+ Nidkabn. thoroughly read, if for no other | 
To the staff of the printing office | 7eason. ” 
and to Jimmie Bill we are deeply in- In his report President abe has 
debted toe" their patience and con- voiced his opinions and criticisms. It 
sideration. Without the service they|!8 not to be expected that: the stu- 
rendered in overtime work The Gate- dents agree with all of these: In 
way could not possibly have made its fact, if the report gives rise to more 
appearance on time. discussion of student institutions it 
And to the staff ‘of the General will have accomplished one of its 
Office we also express our apprecia- Leones OIG Cee Nise teport lise heeti 
tion of their. kindness in assisting in published in the Hope that 2 biden! ne 
getting the results of examinations, CH pe aroraeabiees an ne: 
“lists of’ degrees, prizes, ete. ‘They late discussion and interest in stu- 
cheerfully helped us in any way they dent affairs. a 
-could, and have done much to make 
M this number A fact): _ MEDICAL GRADUATES 
To any others ‘who have not: been} This year is one unique ‘in the 
specifically mentioned herein, we|history of Alberta’s School of Medi- 
wie to take eee opportunity of say-|cine in so far as it is the first time 
ing “Thank you? for assistance ren-| that the degree of Doctor. of Medi- 
dered during the mad s¢ramble of|cine has been conferred. ‘he Gate-|j 
Ne the last few days. . - }way sincerely believes that the gra- 


Mr. GC. K. Johns has been awarded 


cultural College in Quebec. 


Royal. 


cipient will study for a year. - 


wishes to follow. 


stry. 
PHYSICAL EDUCATION FoR|; 
WOMEN 


‘Misses Adum: Allen; Aylesworth; Bata; 
Soret Be a F Ty te M.; yall, Mildr 


a. tannic duating of medical doctors marks a 
“THE PRESIDENT’S REPORT | Very important step in the progress 
“Two items have been specially of the University, and for this reason 
Pantured in this number of The Gate-| 88 specially featured the event. 
Way—the report of the President of| The Alberta school, begun in 1913, | 8 
_ the Union and’ the graduation of has achieved remarkable growth dur-| se 
We Alberta’s first medical class. | ing the past twelve years. Without | {i 
The report drawn up by Mr. Levey|the guiding genius of Dr. Tory and 
is, both interesting and comprehen- the arduous work of his confreres, 
sive and only a very thorough however, ‘such progress would 
_ Knowledge of all phases \¢ student | been impossible. The 
life could make such a Tr, “t pos- Alberta owe a deep debt of peutids : 
sible, Students should t-" ‘sep on ses men for making such ex- ae ; 5 
a ane ee cellent educational privileges sq | Sera " Shlain; Sherritts Biacey = 
asily available, 2 - " Thomason’ ren be Sr never ' 
i ‘Woodhall; 3 


Jamieson; Metal Kellam; boomer ney Li 
i Lyse; “Maclenna eg Ma 
1 hi “MacNab; 
MsGray? “McDonald: pe ecatin 
icKowan; — he Mi 


oe (Gon doa from Page One) 
> BATING SOCIETY. 


ay Malek Gc yak: maton 150.00 | 
Ube hap Income: 4... f 


? DT0 LAITY 


| Hints me “New M.D.’ 8 Give: Us 
Idea of What and What 
Not to Expect 


It is Shek ofteri we have the oppor. 
tunity of getting the medical man’s 
point of view on proper professional 
“This excerpt; taken fr 
5 | larger’ “article, reveals: a few deep, 
5 | dark secrets. . 

Insist on patients. drawing up their 
wills before operation ; 
unnecessary complications. 

In dealing with babies, always tell 
the mother the truth concerning: the 
An honest man’ 8 the 


ab Copa v Lait?  Krchibatd, Ww. Boks skin, i 
| H.; Asplund, ©. ‘O.; Attewell, G. AF Ayige- f Me 


orth, 
Banville, oO. G.; oodna ie 


Pera re cise ak 188. 69 a 
‘Transferred to SU.” ‘General. Hi i 


R. a “Borrowman, A 
Brown, H. K.; B 
Bullock, J. Toi Brynildsen, R. he burstetay 
J.; Cameron, A. A.; Cameron, se Lj Camp- 
bell, Janies Allen; Pach oe 


; Chainer, ats bee aes 


Pascbyicee MM: 


| Puamanrc SOCIETY. 


Ghaegdanbhasbasadenstennts 


ue a 200.00 


dg 
Tater-Yeut Bay ieee ipte sss 
“Admirable Grichton” ‘Receipts 
oo Thgome., Heanseasennantncenetnedeense 


Sneak: WD 


Carlisle, cs est 


i E. cae Culver, E. a1 
Cummings, h. Gi; Dockerill, R..P, 

savage Se Be las. Dickson, H. H. 1L.; 
Ky) Dumouchel, M. 
: Duti Ny Wy Dun): N. B.; Hide ; 


it may save 


Ratiment thine ieee 
Inter-Year Play eer 
‘‘Admirable Crichton” Expens 
Other Expenditure «.....4 

. Transferred to 8.U, Gen 


BACHELOR OF HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS Dick, 
) ‘ babies’ looks. 

noblest wor, etc.” 
5.801 Do not forget to tell your patients 
==——— | how little knowledge the neighbour- 
ing physician possesses, 
your own reputation. 
In case of accident or infection; 
sta blame the nurse or the 
patient.. The physician never errs, 
Call your nurses and other profes. 


: iiaken 7 H.s|' 
Fiaien: R N.; Treiteld, Da Frickleton, Ww. 


Galbraith, E, 


FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOF OF |G.) Fuog, P.: | GLEE cLus. y enhances 


ere rey nee 


Budget veces 
Grant | “from Lit, 


Other Expenditure scsi 
Transferred to S.U. General... 


names; such familiarity tends towards 
greater efficiency. 

Do not forget the psychology of 
suggestion—mention a large fee be-| 
fore going into the details of a case, 

Keep the latest chiropractic liter- 
ature in your waiting room — your’ 
patients may be interested.- 

When returning in the wee small 
hours from a case, do not bring any 
| evidence of the case home with you. 
Join a good golf club. You need 
.|the exercise, and your patients will 
always be pleased to look you up. 

The paths of glory lead but to the 
Why eall in a consultant— 
he may not agree with you? © 

Bury your mistakes. 
ment is faulty, but it takes time to 
ORR up a case. - 

Do not read the current: medical 
“Tt may cause you to 
28 change your ideas on many subjects, 

which is always mentally disturbing 
1} = S6lg6 medical journals cost money. 

If at any time you think that your 
Alma Mater has not been kind to you 
in giving you a medical degree in 
six years, with a complete knowledge 
of modern medicine thrown in as a 
bonus, remember the prophecy of 
Stephen Leacock, quoted below, and 
be thankful. - 

And so may you go out into the 
world, equipped with your store of. 
fight against the autocracy of disease 
knowledge, that by your aid in the 
you may help to make the world safe’ 
for the democracy of H 

“The year 2000 A.D. was rendered. 
notable in the annals of McGill Uni- 
versity as the marking the epoch at. 
which the Medical course obtained at) 
last its complete length. On Convo. 
cation Day in that year the Principal 
(General Sir Arthur Currie) stated) 
that the time had been, over a cen-) 
4.92 \tury ago, when the Medical Course | 
=] | had covered only three years; it had) 
presently been raised to four yea 
and even more, but when he assume 
office eighty years ago it was still) 
possible for a man to go out into 
practice after a school and college 
preparation of only fourteen years.| 
(Cries of ‘Shame!’’) He was happy. 
to state that owing to the action of 
successive Boards of Governors, the 
course had been extended until now) 
it had been made for life. 
looked at the venerable students in, 
front of him; many of whom had 
spent fifty years in the Faculty, he 
asked himself was it fair to turn these’ 
men out into the world. What could 
they do?—unless perhaps they could 
practice medicine, he didn't know.” 


Bryan, George James, B.A. (with Dis- ae 


Theta M. J.; Jones, A. R.; Johnston, 
H. C..W.; Kellam, B 
icingaman, R.; ; 


Lakusta, W.; 
Lesk, Ph Male. 
Si is Lucas, J. W.; 

+ Lynch-Staunton, 

:| Lyneh-Staunton, He: Lefarud i ob H il, 
AY oy i were G. C. M.; Liesemer, A. 
> MacGregor, H. A.; MacLach- 

j McHeat, Tt. C5 aire, Ve Ww. 


ORCHESTRA. 


Kocher, W. 33 Kelly, ¢. 


54 a 
| Grant from ‘Lit. General 


uipm. 
bs Brvendlies” a , 


WOMEN’S ATHLETIC 
_. ASSOCIATION 


Be os | Ww. AS 


W. go. aeaeeia bt; Ww. "8.5 M 
: Moon, -H. Ne Aeeearty! 
ee u: wet ears 


L. Na te ete 


alotkitta hed Bid aonb GENERAL. 


“Blance ee cei ali Hasty. judg. 


‘Balance Tennis. 4...: 


Other Income «0... 


One®, 1, w.: :Ortner, WE: 
G. a Piper, L 
Te 


Osburn, A. zi | 
'T 


. 8.5 Pollock, 0. Bortenn 
ea ane eeu ans 
Other Expenditure ... 

Transfer to Hockey ‘ 


Teanereenod to 8.U. General. 


. Ge NEHA We: et, im D 
DICINE, AD epher, Wi Cat. Russell, W. Fis Russell, U. 8. 


+; Steeves, W.. B.; Stephens, 6 
P.; Syrotuck, 
ail A ‘W.; Schroeder, F. 
Wa diy Spargo, G. 
rs sds Stapleton, 


beet Than ot; J.3 Trick, 1. 


Sbeeneeaseenseyeoweasaansennr: 


Grant from 8.U. anim niieaaese 
ae Income: ddscdsecesbeuaaclavsilbuany 


LICENTIATE COURSE: IN PHARMACY Scott, H. A 


‘Otner Expenditure. ‘ine 


Balance to Athletic General .... 


; Van Buren, B. K.; Paieay’ 


; Walton, Ty Ce Watt, 
R. a. Wershof, Mi. a. Wright, K.; 


WOMEN’S HOCKEY out 


By Budget ...... eesti astealvit 
Grant from 8.U. “General 
Loan from '8.U. 
‘Other Income 
Transferred from “Athletic Gane 


RF, cae Wright, 7% 
R. J. 


The following persons haye passed the ; Woodford, R. BY Woodford, 


examinations for-License to Practise, con- 
ducted by the University on behalf of the | 


uate OF CLASS. 
MEMBERS DEFINED 


(Continued from Page One) 


tioned student (not included in (e)) | 
who is registered in the third 
of any degree course of four, 


Equipment |... 
Loan: Returne 
Other Expenditure 


Anderson, Arnold Johnston;  Jennett, |> 
Beverley I.; Joyce, Alfred Lorne; Kilgour, 
Clifford Stanley: Mapson, Edward Creswell; 


Year| womEN’s TENNIS CLUB. 
Budget .....05 mulet cea tants aataleniebieeey $- 


Amundsen, M.  E.; A Sattar, “M. M.; 


an, -V. M.;° Cox, M.G.; Donaldaan 
a 3 Evans, G. 5.3 Fiola, E.; Fleenor, H.; 
Fleming, M.; George, H. C. A.; Glover, Be; 


(2) An undergraduate or. condi- |: 
tioned student (not included in (c)) 
who is registered in the second year 
of any three year degree course re- 
quiring Senior Matriculation. 
concerning the 
Sophomore © are much the same as 


:| those concerning the Junior, except|MEN’S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 
: MEN’S SENS} GENERAL. 


pbrlaetlap tas sah ia 225.00 
Tea ueferene ‘from’ “Rugby hives ‘ 
Transferred Sabie! Roeder) Apaiebsh 


Heffernan, L. M,; Horneland, ects Hooper, 

D. M.; Human, H.; Hennessy, 8. J.; Hunter, 
B M.; Jasenchuk, B.;. Kitiuk, : Knights, 
M. J.; Lafleur, M.; Lomness, 8. Se Lock- 


Total Mependrtdee’. i 
RUEMEL hieyacl ite Women’s At th. 


McBean, J. A.; McCrea, M. H.; McMil lan, 


M-i| that. they stipulate: 
_ “That a student, whether condi- 


5. &.2 Sheffield, F.; Shirley, B. C.; Taylor, 


en’s. Basketball 
Other Expenditure 
Grant to Men's Hockey .. 


A printer’s error has occurred in 
the article concerning scholarships 


a TENNIS CLUB. 


Transferred. to 8.0. General . 


appearing on page 6. The awards 


“From.” “Women’ yi 
‘ Tennls Meaghataeh iataxcesaienet cess Mesteeae 


are to be made in 1925—not 1295. 


CLASH OF MEETINGS 
TO BE AVERTED 


MEN'S SENIOR ‘BASKETBALL. 

sesaneaaes A 27 00 
ome 

cranetesred Athletic ‘General... 


Macdonald Scholarship, Award- 


‘otal Expenditure 8 
Transferred to ene General. ii 


(Continued from Page One) 


“2. For the purpose of this Act, unless 
context otherwise requires, 
shall be taken to include. dances, banquets 
and major athletic events. 

B.A Schedule man shall be appo! inted by |) 
the Students’ Council at the first meeting of BOXING AND WRESTLING. 


Other Expenditare ery _ STATEMENT OF MEDICAL 
_ SERVICES 


the Macdonald scholarship for. 1924- 
26, and will be-Alberta’s representa-. 
tive next year at the Macdonald Agri- 


Pees) 808 at. $5, nee 


the academic year, to hold office for the 
duration of the said year. 

4. It shall be the duty of the Schedule 
man to regulate the time of the meetings | 
of the various student organizations. 

5. The Schedule man shall call a meeting 
of representatives “of all student organiz- 


During his three years at the Uni- 
versity of Alberta, C. K. has not only 
set a splendid record as a student, 
but has taken a prominent part in 
student activities and in athletics. 
| He was also a member of the Alberta 
stock judging team that last year won 
the Macdonald trophy at the Toronto 


Other Income sissies : i 
: DISBURSEMENTS _ 
Ovenkeponded; 1928- aie oe 
Ambulance and Taxi . 
Drugs and Supplies ..... 
Salary, Nurse neha 


Printing and rt 


bnogsdesesanpoaaqaenayeuones of 133. 60 
“Other Expenditure ataaivasbacueadanen 
‘Transferred to: 8. U. ‘General.. vo 


(b) He shall there communicate {Ff these 
representatives the terms of this Act, and M 
any related regulations of the Students’ 
Council or of the Pammittes on Student 


EN’S HOCKEY CLUB. _ 


A scholarship to Macdonald Col- Residence Charges” 


lege is awarded annually to each col- 
lege of agriculture in the Dominion. 
Bach scholarship is to the value of 
$500 tenable at Macdonald College, 
Ste. Anne de Bellevue, where the re- 


Grant from $.U. “General, 
Loan from 8.U. General .. 
Grant from Athletic Gener 
Other aun Lats siadistasialaotiy 


Balance on hand . 

(c) The Schedule man shall ‘then “divide : 

the organizations into two classes: — 

(1) Those meeting at regular intervals; 
(2) Those meeting at irregular intervals. 
(d) The representatives of the first class 

Wwill-arrange with the representatives of the | 

‘second class ‘that. certain days each week 

will be left free for the meetings of the 

organizations of the second class. 

(e) The representatives of the first class 
‘will then draft a eh eet oftheir meetings 
for the year. 

(f) The time of meg of the: organiz- 
‘atiete of the second class shall be lalotted 
on application. : 

6. Every organization ” “shall be fequired 
to make written application to the Schedule 
man three days before the proposed. itme 
of meeting, except in the case of meetings ty 
arranged for under ‘subseetion toy of ak i 


Student Unio University oe Alberta _ : 
Ci at Rae ae “1025 


In the selection, which is made by | 
the Faculty Council in Agriculture, 
other qualifications, in addition to 
scholastic standing, are given careful 
consideration. The student must have 
a definite course of study which 
‘would be materiall ule by a term 
at Macdonald Colle The award 
must fit in with the he of work the 
student is at present following, or} 


urn Loan §.U. General eperenret 100, ve 
Hautpment sheasteenenceyens atesnseressages 

' Other Bxpénditure | 
Transferred to 8.U. 


“yarn eho Racnelig aN E cassie Receivable. NaH 
Inventories— 

Office. Furniture 
Bauipment . HG 


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have precedence over all other ‘saadtthige: : 

8. Applications for. permission to hold| 
‘dances, banquets, major athletic events, and | 
é meetings in ‘Convocation Hall shall be first | . 
w the” ‘Schedule Man, who shall] © Ot 
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OBE icaaitacsspneuudy AOG00 


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Jin. the rotunda of the Arts. Building a} 
-|ealendar of th qeaetes for the fernigioes bh 


Act shall be guilty of an offence Ey ‘aes 
section 9 of Section il of the ‘Students’ Code | ~ 


THE EL 


que careway 


RBI Se USNS APTN VA ERIN MIN UT 


Al 


_ Made Remarkable Progress) 


One of Four Class ‘A’ Medical 


eS pao ari 


chool has 


Schools in Canada—University _ 


Controls Its Own Hospital 


In writing a few words for the 
special Convocation number of the 
Gateway, I must begin by congratu- 
lating the members of the first gradu- 
ating class in Medicine on having 
completed their course. The road 
they have travelled has not been an 
easy one, either for them or for the 
University authorities. Much hard 
spade work had to be done and many 
prejudices had to be overcome be- 
fore the final years of Medicine were 
added to the course; but in the end, 
however, the faculty was completed 
and the way to graduation was 
opened. I heartily congratulate the 
graduating class and wish them all 
prosperity, 


Now, just’ a few words about the 
Medical Faculty itself. It had its be- 
ginning not, as has been suggested, 
in the ambitious and overheated 
brain of the President, but as the 
result of a growing demand from the 
country districts of the province. If 
my memory serves me aright, the 
first suggestion that a medical facul- 
ty should be started in the University 
was made by Mr. Peter Gunn, now 
Sheriff Gunn, when he was a member 
of the Legislature for Lac Ste. Anne. 
He stated in the Legislature and to 
me privately that there was a great 
need for doctors in the country places 


-and that it was the duty of the Uni- 


versity to have a proper medical 
school for the purpose of training our 
own young people. In the early days 
of the University, the country mem- 
bers of the Legislature were constant- 
ly demanding that the Government 
make provision for the care of the 
sick in the country districts. A con- 
siderable number of doctors of medi- 


cine who had failed to pass the neces-' 


sary qualifying examinations of the 
province were granted licence to prac- 
tise by legislative enactment because 
they were practising in country dis- 
triets, In the Annual Report of the 
University to the government for the 
year ending June 80, 1918, the fol- 
lowing paragraph occurs: 

“In starting medical teaching in 
the University of Alberta, the Senate 
and Board of Governors were prompt- 
ed by a desire to assist’ in solving 
what is rapidly becoming a pressing 
problem, namely, the care of the sick 
in the country districts of the pro- 
vince. Medical men coming from’ out- 
side, generally speaking, prefer to 
settle in towns’ and cities. The re- 
quirements of the country, it is be- 
lieved, will not be met until men are 
trained who have been brought up 
under our own conditions of life and 
who are thus familiar with the needs 
of our country districts.” 

Further, Alberta students were 
practically debarred from studying 
medicine because of the cost of 
travelling, the years of study required 


- and the high cost of medical educa- 


tion. These factors combined made 
training in medicine impossible to all 
but the few who were well situated 
financially. 

In the fall of 1918, the Faculty of 
Medicine Was started. “The Depart- 
ments of Chemistry, Physics, Biology 
were already in éxistence in the 
Faculty of Arts. The Departments of 
Anatomy and Physiology were there- 
fore added and arrangements com- 
pleted for three years’ work of the 


_ five year course then required by 


most of the Canadian universities. 
After our plans were completed, they 
were submitted to McGill and To- 
ronto Universities, and both institu- 
tions agreed to give our students 
standing in the fourth year without 
examinations. The faculty was thus 
fairly launched. ‘ 
The nucleus was the Public Health 
Laboratories for which the Govern- 
ment in 1911 asked the University 
to accept responsibility. Dr. Revell, 
who was in charge of the Laborator- 
ies, was taken over ultimately by the 
University and made Professor of 
Anatomy, and the late Colonel Mo- 
shier was appointed Professor of 
Physiology. In 1914, Dr. Rankin was 
appointed Director of the Public 
Health Laboratories and became Pro- 
fessor of Bacteriology. These three 
departments with the other scientific 
departments of the University in the 
Faculty of Arts were the first units 
which entered into the faculty. - 
Then came the war, and with it a 
call for medical men and medical stu- 
dents. Dr. Rankin joined up at once. 
Dr. Moshier later went overseas with 
the 1ith Field Ambulance, taking 
with him many of the medical. stu- 
dents, A few continued their courses 
either at McGill or Toronto, finishing 
their work in competition with stu- 


| dents whose preliminary training had 


been in eastern universities. They 
made ‘such a good showing in com- 
Parison that the position of the fac- 
ulty as a teaching body was immedi- 
ately recognized. 

In the meantime, the absence of 


——— yeeros 


doctors overseas made the call: for 
medical men more insistent in the 
country. Then came the awful 
influenza scourge of 1918 with its 
toll of death. The university was 
closed for a while and Pembina Hall 
was turned into a hospital: A de- 
mand was immediately made in the 
Legislature that the final years in 
Medicine should be added to~ the 
course at the University to enable 
students to graduate. On my return 
from Europe in 1919, the Government 
gave us authority to go forward with 
our Medical Building and to add the 
final years of the course, as soon as 
financial arrangements could be com- 
pleted. 

Just about this time, word eached 
us that the Rockefeller Foundation 
was offering to assist medical schools 
in Canadian universities, if a certain 
standard. of work was maintained. 
It was through their generosity that 
we were able to put on the final years 
of the course, for though the Legis- 
lature was anxious to have the faculty 
completed, it did not show the same 
willingness to provide the necessary 
funds to put a sufficient teaching 
staff on a permanent basis. The 
Rockefeller. Foundation agreed to 
give us $25,000 a year for five years 
with a partial promise that,-if we 
succeeded in our plan of completing 
the Medical Building with its labo 
atories, they would make us a capi- 
tal grant of $500,000. Because of 
this we were able to make at once 
a certain number of new appoint- 
ments and to add materially to our 
equipment, The new Medical Build- 
ing, begun in the spring of 1920, 
was brought to completion in the 
summer of 1921 and was opened for 
teaching purposes the following Sep- 
tember. In planning and equipping 
this building, the aim was not* only 
to. make it adequate for scientific 
instruction but to make provision for 
every department in it to be a re- 
search department. 


A year later we were visited by 
the Secretary of the Council on Medi- 
eal Education and Hospitals of the 
American Medical Association, who, 
after & thorough investigation of our 
equipment and teaching © power, 
recommended our school for a Class 
“A? classification among the Medi- 
cal Schools of America. It is hard- 
ly necessary to say that this was a 
recognition of what had been accom- 
plished which made’ everyone  con- 
nected with the Medical School feel 
very proud. d i 

It was not a difficult matter” to 
arrange for the preliminary sciences 
if money could be provided to get 
equipment and appoint a staff. It was 
a different matter when it came to 
securing “the necessary clinical ma- 
terial. Fortunately, in the early 
days of the University, when the City 
of Strathcona was building a hospital, 
arrangements were made to have it 
built upon the University grounds, 
looking to a possible medical school 
in the future. During the war, this 
hospital ‘had been leased to the Do- 
minion Government as a military hos- 
pital. In 1922 negotiations were 
entered into and completed bctween 
the University and the City of Mdm- 
onton for the transfer of this hos- 
pital to the University. This gave 
the University direct control of a 
hospital for clinical purposes, placing 
it in a unique position in Canada. In 
order to accommodate the soldiers, 
the University and the Dominion 
Government agreed to the erection of 
a special soldiers’ wing, which raised 
the bed capacity of the hospital to 
about one hundred and seventy-five, 
giving the necessary space for the 
required clinical services, 

The final step in the completion 
of our plans was taken last year 
when a building was rented in the 
more thickly settled portion of the 
City of Edmonton for the purpose 
of an outdoor clinic. 

It must be remembered, however, 
that in any ‘educational institution 
recognition does not come because 


of the possession of buildings and 


equipment but because of the pres- 
ence in the institution of the right 
kind of men carrying on instruction 
and research and also of students of 
quality. The University of Alberta 
has been singularly fortunate in the 
men who have constituted the per- 
sonnel of its Medical School. It is 
not necessary to mention individuals. 
Whatever recognition the Medical 
School has received so far has been 
due to the self-denying efforts and 
devotion to the institution of the 
members of its teaching faculty, Its 
reputation in the future, however, 
will depend upon the quality of the 
work done by its graduates. The 
medical profession is one of the nob- 
lest of all professions. Of no other 
are such high ideals of life and con- 
duct demanded. I am confident that 


This building, 


MEDICAL BUILDING 


erected and equipped at a cost approximating $2,500.000, 
is one of the finest of its type in Canada 


Sita sone hnsmeesiom acon 


GRADUATES GET 


See Selves Twenty-five Years 
Hence, in Position of Respon- 


sibility and Influence 


(Note.—This is the verbatim report of the 
toast given by Dr. Pope, Professor of 
~-Medieine, to the graduating class at the 
recent medical banquet.) 


In rising to propose a toast to the 
Graduating Class, I am fully cogniz- 
‘ant of the honour that has been con- 
ferred upon me. I am not, for ex- 
ample, unmindful of the fact that 
this is the first graduating class in 
the history of Medicine in the Uni- 
versity of Alberta. Possibly the 
members of the class have not them- 
selves fully realized the significance 
of their position. Have they, for 
instance, contemplated the enormous, 
the comprehensive responsibility in- 
cidental to it? Have they stopped 
to gaze into the crystal and see them- 
selves twenty-five years from tonight 
occupying the seats of the mighty 
now held by your Dean and his mid- 
dle-aged colleagues? If on that night 
they are somewhat boastful of the 
memory of their graduation with the 
first Albertan group, they may well 
be forgiven even though the land may 
have gone dry again and deprived 
them of that -inspiration which has 
its expression in the old and hack- 
neyed phrase ‘In vivo. veritas’. 


It may not be amiss, either, for 
the proposer of this toast to offer a 
timely word of good advice to guide 
them on-their way. Let it be known 
that the: day is nigh at hand when 
they will be face to face with real 
issues, real emergencies, real prob- 
lems of their own. ‘They will soon 
be taking their places as the fellow- 
practitioners of those who have al- 
ready passed the portals of public 
confidence. They are soon to link 
themselves up with a.community that 
will expect of them an enormous 
amount of service and efficiency. 
They will, if they look straight, find 
themselves bound by the law and the 
church to sweet and tender compan- 
ions with whom they will pursue the 
traditions of Biology and go forth 
and multiply and replenish the earth. 
Soon they will find themselves play- 
ing a triple role in the tragedy, in the 
comedy, in the drama, in the opera of 
life—the role of the physician, the 
citizen, and the head of a family— 
a role that will enact the highest de- 
gree of histrionic versatility. There- 
fore, let them study. well the lines of 
their. fellow-players and act in har- 
mony among them. There is no bet- 
ter than the Golden Rule to guide 
them.  Professional- ethics ‘may be 
reduced to a common denominator— 
gentlemanliness. : 


As practitioners, let our young 
hopefuls be warned against one terri- 
ble. pit-fall: the unhappy practice of 
looking at frail humanity with only 
a surgical eye. 


As citizens, let them take a lively 
interest in community problems and 
discussions and let them remain in 
this great Dominion to help in its 
reconstruction. The Doctor of Medi- 
cine, by virtue of his mental training 
in treating disease of the individual, 
may be best equipped to detect and 
to treat the diseases of the body 
politic. : 

Finally, as heads of families, let 
them imbue their progeny with the 


or 


(Continued on Page 6) 


the members of the graduating ciass 
have had instilled into them by those 
from whom they received instruction 
a lofty conception of their life’s 
work. If our graduates live up to 
that conception, there will be no ques- 
tion of the place which the Medical 
School will have in the future of Al- 


berta. 
H. M. TORY, 
President. 


(MEDICAL GRADUATE 
‘GLIMPSE OF FUTURE) MAY SHIFT HORIZON 


By Service in Foreign Lands He 
Builds Valuable Foundation - 
of General Knowledge 


(Dr. H. H. Hepburn, M.D.C.M., F.R.C.S.E.) 


These coniments are made, having 
in mind principally, the horizon as 
viewed by the medical student, under- 
graduate and graduate. By the time 
the student has entered a medical 
school it is presumed that he is fa- 
miliar with the law of gravitation, 
and has a general idea of the con- 
struction. of the universe. The de- 
lusion of childhood, that, all that 
really matters can be seen from the 
paternal house-top, has probably been 
dispelled. By the time he leaves the 
medical school he may, or may not 
have recovered from the delusion of 
youth, that the social, and scientific 
order revolves about him and his, and 
ean be viewed from the figurative 
roof of his Alma Mater. He may see 
himself as the center of a small cir- 
cle of knowledge, his teachers as the 
center of a larger, concentric circle, 
and his teachers’ teachers as the 
center of a larger, concentric circle, 
whose radius leads beyond the horizon 
of his present knowledge. Wander- 
lust or scientific curiosity may 
prompt the desire to extend his 
knowledge, and shift the horizon: by 
pilgrimage to distant shrines, or prac- 
tical experience in foreign lands. 

To the student who is fortunate 
enough’ to enjoy the advantages of 
foreign travel while still an under- 
graduate, the writer would give this 
advice: Do not spend your limited 
time in the wards of the London Hos- 
pital, nor in the laboratories of the 
Pasteur’ Institute. Rather, invest 
your time, and energy, in observing 
the peoples, and studying the social 
conditions that developed those great 
institutions. Lay a broad foundation 
of general knowledge, on which to 
build the structure of your special 
knowledge. The lifting of the em- 
bargo on Canadian cattle may again 
afford the opportunity for the thrifty 
student to visit Europe during the 
summer vacation. In the days when 
the writer was an undergraduate, 
large numbers of students worked a 
passage to and from Europe on cat- 
tle boats. 

To the graduate, there are ‘Open 
each year, a limited number of ap- 
pointments as ship surgeon on the 
various ocean liners, These vessels 
are frequently in port for from one 
to four weeks, and afford consider- 
able opportunity for seeing the world 
—without joining the navy. For 
those who wish to go abroad and set- 
tle down to concentrated post-gradu- 
ate work, two plans present them- 
selves. One may be fortunate enough 
to obtain an appointment as Interne 
in some hospital, or as assistant in 
some laboratory. The less fortunate, 
and great majority, will be obliged 
to content themselves with attend- 
ance at the free clinics, and in addi- 
tion, arrange to join private classes. 
No student should proceed abroad 
without first having consulted some- 
one who is familiar with the educa- 
tional center he proposes to visit. 

For one whose expérience abroad 
must be, at least, self-supporting, one 
thinks first of the Indian Medical 
Service, and the British Colonial Ser- 
vice. Both of these, however, de- 
mand that one must obligate himself 
for a considerable number of years. 
The Indian Medical Service was at 


_jone time very attractive, but in so 


far as the white man is concerned, 
it has really had its day. The Colon- 
ial Service affords a wider field, com- 
prising various stations in. Africa, 
Strait Settlements, Zanzibar, and sey- 
eral of the lesser islands; The writer 
has not heard this service very favor- 
ably spoken of. 5; 

For those who have read Kipling, 
and yearn for the “spicy garlic 
smells”, there are opportunities in the 
tropical and subtropical zones of 


ence Steen tia meena 


VEN MEMBERS OF ALBERTA’S FIRST GRADUATIN 


- Enveloped in Superstition : 


Study 


rn rn nena cnet napa teense 4 


Medical Practice in O 


Among Siamese Shows Curious Beliefs — Derangement Of. 


rater an cocteinemeenamncens 


ient 


Four Body Elements, They Say, Causes Disease 


It may be truthfully stated in general terms, that the Siamese native 
practice of medicine is enveloped in the deep darkness of ignorance and 


superstition. 


Keen studious observation, which is indispensable to gen- 


eral practice, is exceedingly rare in the profession—-what is written in 
their medical books of the virtues and powers ,of particular medicines, is 
received by native physicians as true, of course, and their own powers of 
observation are so obtuse, that however wide from the truth these de- 


scriptions may be, they would not be 


however long continued, to detect thir falsity. 


likely, on a trial of their virtues, 
If any article of the ma- 


teria medica does not produce the effect it is written that it would, it is 


attributed, not to want of power of 
acting influence beyond human ken 
to forsee and human power to avert. 

The most learned among them have 
the least possible knowledge of an- 
atomy. They have some vague no- 
tions of a few of the bones, but no 
idea of their number. As to distinct 
muscles of the human body, they 
know absolutely nothing, regarding 
them all as an ingistinguishable mass 
of flesh. With a few of the super- 
ficial tendons, they are, of course, 
acquainted, and can call by appropri- 
ate names. But’ of the nerves they 
are profoundly ignorant, and hence 
there is no word, or set of words in 
the language by -which to designate 
any one of them. -They cannot avoid 
seeing some of the most superficial 
veins, but concerning the arterial cir- 
culation, they have the most ludi- 
erous notions, supposing the pulse, 
whenever felt to be a conductor of 
wind. They suppose the two pas- 
sages to the lungs and stomach to 
be one and the same and that the 
heart can be reached via the oesopha- 
gus. The liver is regarded as hav- 
ing so slight a fastening as to be 
able to go out of its place at any 
time at all. 


The Siamese believe tiie human 
system to be composed wholly of the 
four elements, water, wind, fire, and 
earth and that disease is simply a 
disarrangement in the proportion of 
these elements, They believe that 
matter of all kinds without the body 
is constituted: in the sume way and 
that it is continually operating upon 
the elements within, producing health 
or disease. If, for example, the ele- 
ment Fire from without enters the 


body in undue proportions, it will} 


derange the healthy 3juitibriun: of 
the same element within and the 
consequence will be sume one = or 
more of the many of their diseases 
arranged under the division Wire, as 
fevers—intermittent, remittent and 
continued —- measles and smallpox. 
Similarly each ‘one of the four ex- 
ternal elements at times excite one 
or more of the corresponding internal 
powers to diseased action. Each ele- 
ment is supposed to have its season 
of peculiar disease influence, In cer- 
tain months of the year, the Wind 
is prone to bring disease. ‘ 

But disease is not always excited 
by the elements that are external to 
the body. The internal elements, be- 
ing deranged, losing their healthy 
equilibrium from causes wholly  in- 
ternal. For instance, apoplexy, they 
say, is a diseased action caused by 
the internal wind blowing from all 
parts of the system upon the heart 
with such force that it is often rup- 
tured and consequently life instan- 
taneously extinguished, or that the 
Wind has some how or other made 
too much of a vacuum in the upper 
storey and must be forced to return 
upwards if curé is to be effected. It 
is believed that wind may be expel- 
led from the body by all te emunc- 
tories of the skin; hence, that it may 


most familiar is the kingdom of Siam, 
famous for its production of rice, 
teak wood, and twins. In that coun- 
try there has been developed a medi- 
eal school for training of native stu- 
dents, and a well organized’ medical 
service, employing some twenty or 
thirty white medical men. This de- 
velopment has been; in no small 
measure, due to the efforts and ex- 
ample of Professor A: C. Rankin, the 
present dean of the medieal faculty of 
the University of Alberta, with whom 
the writer had the pleasure of be- 
ing associated in the Siamese ser- 
vice, prior to the late World War. 
For the surgeon and the pathologist 
in particular, that country offers a 
wealth of material, and practical ex- 
perience. 


No matter what course be pur- 
sued in the quest of knowledge, and 


in the shifting of the horizon, the}, 


writer would urge two precepts: 
firstly, that one should generalize 
before one specializes, and second- 
ly, that one should always have, 
and never lose sight of, a defin- 
ite objectives 
The writer has, through this arti- 
ele, avoided the use of the feminine 
gender. Not that he has failed to 
note, nor wished to show any disap- 
proval of the advent of the lady doc- 
tor, but rather that he shrinks from 
the task of attempting to guide the 
destinies of young ladies, a 


G CLA 


ry 


the medicine, but to some counter- 


Asia and South America. The tropi- . 
eal field with which the writer is 
be withdrawn by suction as with cup- | 
ping instruments — poultices and 
plasters—that it may be abstracted 
by venesection and sacrification— 
that it may be drawn out with the 
perspiration. by -diaphoretics internal 
and external, general and tropical— 
that it may be hushed with seda- 
tives within and without, and lastly, 
that a healthy equilibrium may be re- 
stored by medicines which haye the 
powers to invite or drive the surplus 
element to parts of the system that 
suffer for want of it. : 

If the disease be one which they 
suppose to arise from Wind defi- 
ciency—they will try to raise a breeze 
by appropriate medicines or dietetic 
means. They suppose singing in the 
ears and giddiness to be due to a 
deficiency of wind blowing upwards 
to the brain. The upper part of the 
skull becomes consequently too great 
a Vacuum. The approved method of 
treatment is to fill the stomach with 
food’ to high intensity. ues 

It is a rare thing for any native 
trained physician to profess to be a 
general practitioner of medicine. 
They content themselves usually with 
the practice, of but one or two 
branches of the profession: One 
practices exclusively in fevers, anoth- 
er smallpox, another treats only 
dropsy, and so on, Considering their 
small capacities and indisposition to 
study and enlarge the sphere of their 
knowledge, it is no doubt well that 
they do not attempt to do more in- 
dividually. es 
According to their theory, all dis- 
eases are produced either from ex- 
cess or diminution of one or more of. 
the elements. In nineteen cases out 
of twenty, the patient, to inquiry 
what ails him, will reply ‘“‘Pen-lom” 
-—it is the wind, There are two 
grand divisions of internal wind, viz.: 
that above the diaphram and that be- 


low. It is seldom if ever that disease 


runs its course without involving one 
or more of the other elements. For 
example, in the case of a phlegmon — 
or boil, the wind is first at fault, by © 
driving the blood from all quarters of | 


the body into the locality of the — : 
disaese where it stagnates, being in- — 


vested, as it were, by the wind, Sec-. 
ondly, Water (blood serum) ‘conse- 
quently settles in that pla¢e. Third-— 
ly, the internal fire having nothing 
to fan it away, the wind having re- 
tired from action at the time, then 
acts upon the serum and heats it to> 
sealding; and, fourthly, the earth be- 
comes diseased from the great heat 
and is consequently decomposed and 
Belted down into pus and mortifica- 
ion. 

They have four general classes of 
medicine, viz.: those that have a — 
tendency to counteract disturbances 
made by each one of the four ele- 
ments. The modus operandi of the 
individual medicines of each dose is 
supposed to be as various as the spe- 
cific diseases are. . Medicine for a 
wind in the head may be very di- 
verse and operate very differently 
from that of a medicine for wind else- 
where. A. snuff, an .application of 
wash to the eyes or ears, a patch of 
plaster to the temples may calm the 
wind in the head, while a carminative — 
or something else totally at variance, 
taken into the stomach, will dissipate 
the storm in that region. The  Si- 
amese physician is employed by the 
job. On condition that the doctor 
cure the disease, the patient, or his 
agent, promises to pay a stipulated 
sum of money. If the doctor 
to fulfill the condition of the bargain 
he will of course get nothing for his 
trouble and expense. The expression 


“Maw Nu K’ei laaoh”, the doctor has a 


fled from his patient, expresses the 
too frequent conséquence of profes- 
sional despair. a : eee 
Usually, it is the highest ambition 
of a native physician to pursue: but. 
a few of the four orders of the pro- | 


to allow himself to possess a house — 


boards of solid timber instead of — 
bamboo, with a little yard or orchard 
attached and some two or three wives 
and all together a growing family of 
half brothers and sisters. Polygamy. 
among them is accounted a mark of — 
opulent distinction, and fayour which — 
has descended to them by virtue of 
good deeds performed in ‘prev 
states of existence. 


SS IN MEDICIN 


ails 


fession and to make money enough a 


floored with plank and enclosed with 


PAGE FOUR 


ec aman 


acre 


MEDICAL SERVICES | 


It should not be necessary to ex- 
plain to ‘any member of the Union 
this year what the objects of the 
Medical Services are and how its ad- 
ministration is carried on. The 
pamphlet issued to each one of us at 
the time of registration makes these 


points quite clear. The report on this 
subject read by Mr. Haworth some 
time ago definitely states that our 


- Medical Services is ‘fat least as good 


tion. 


‘ 


form of observation. 


‘man. Although the 


if not better than any other similar 
service in America.”. The financial 
statement to be submitted to you pre- 
sently will speak eloquently for its 
efficient and economical administra- 
The year was started with a 
deficit of about $1,500, and it is 
hoped to close it with a surplus of 
about $300, The entire credit for 
this splendid showing igs due to the 
professional members of the Medical 
Services staff, Dr. Pope (the Direc- 
tor), Dr. Scott, and Nurse Hayes, and 
to the admministrative staff, Presi- 
wa Tory, Dr. MacRachran and Mr. 
est. : 


Students’ Council | 


pees ee Eg a a 


GRADUATING 


GRACE STUDHOLME 
President of Wauneitas 


The Council has held nineteen 
meetings. Some of its sessions were 
many hours long owing to the im- 
portance and number of questions 
under consideration. 

I take advantage of this opportun- 
ity to thank the members of the 
Council, individually and collectively, 
for their loyal and hearty support 
during my term of office. Without 
their assistance and suggestions any 
small effort I may have made to*serve 
you would have been fruitless. From 
experience in three different Councils 
I am inclined to think that this year 
the heads of the major organizations 
cooperated to a greater extent. 

Before passing on to the few criti- 
cisms and suggestions I have to make 
I would remind you that the Council 
is the Central Executive of the Un- 
ion and is responsible to the Stu- 


dents’ Union and to the University / 


authorities, from whom we derive all 
our powers, authority and privileges. 
The Council, then, is a guardian of 
the good name of our University in so 
far as students are concerned. It 
is responsible for the efficient ad- 
ministration of all student activities 
and for the maintenance of student 
discipline, -It is also responsible for 
the proper management of our treas- 
ury which handles approximately 
$20,000 a year. To accept a posi- 
tion on the Council, means the ac- 
knowledgement of a heavy responsi- 
bility, Se 

The measure of usefulness and suc- 
cess of your Council is directly pro- 
portional to the realization by each 
individual member of his or her re- 
sponsibility. " 

In my opinion, the Council as at 
present constituted, is rather un- 
weildy——largely because of its num- 
bers. If it is to continue in its pres- 
ent form, I would submit the follow- 
ing: : Si 
1. That meetings’ be held regularly 
once a week at a given date, 
hour and place. 
That the Secretary record in the 
minutes of each meeting the 
names of absent members, ex- 


2: 


cept when written explanation |’ 


of absence has been received and 
the same accepted by the meet- 
ing. ; 
That at these meetings the-mem- 
bers indicate the policy being 
followed in their various organ- 
izations and submit for the ap- 
proval of the Council all new 
financial transactions. 

The Council should keep closer 
supervision of the finances of the 
Union. It is foolish to spend 
time in October discussing the 
advisability of reducing the 
Wauneita budget by $8.00, and 
later on allow other organiza- 
tions to make transfers of mon- 
ies and incur liabilities far ex- 
ceeding this sum without the ap- 

_ proval of the Council. 
That the Treasurer of the Un- 
. jon have charge of the financial 


4, 


5. 


STUDENTS’ COURT 
Chief Justice Bryan is to be con- 
gratulated on the success which fol- 
lowed his efforts to strengthen the 
position of the Court. The student 
body recognize its value and useful- 


ness as well as its authority. The 
Rice case has been a factor in unify- 


c ing the student body in support of 


the Court. 

I would make one criticism in the 
Not long ago 
at one of our functions the behavior 
of a member of the Union very ob- 


viously was not becoming to a gentle- 
Sheriff was 
present and had observed what was 
going on, no action was taken by 
hit | pes Be 

- 1 must take advantage of this op- 
portunity to emphatically deny the 


allegations occasionally made to the 


truth. 
> of fici 


~ effect that the Court is merely a 


mouthpiece of the University auth- 
orities. Nothing is further from the 
‘The Chief Justice and other 


Js of our Court are supposed 


see that such records afte kept. — 


arrangements of any function— 
outside the usual activities, and 
especially where such function is 
of particular interest to the 
Union and the University.. 

No transfer of money should be 
made from one ‘organization to 
another without the approval of 
the Council. 

The Council should first approve 
all expenditures on equipment 
exceeding a certain sum. - 

No organization should at the 


end of its season’s activities, in- 
vest in equipment for future 
years upless the Council gives 
its approval. 


All {presentatiéna and recogni- 

tions should have the approval ot 
* the major organizations and the 

Council. é 


- It would expedite matters if the 
executives ofthe major organ- 
izations also met regularly and 
their representatives brought to 
the Council meeting their pur- 
chasing and paying requisitions. 
Were this suggestion to be 
adopted even in a modified 
form it would- obviate  occur- 
rences such as the following: 


Within the past two weeks I 
signed three cheques to the total 
value of over $100. The Men's 
Athletic Association should have 
submitted both a paying and a 
purchasing requisition for one of 
these last November. ‘The Liter- 
ary Association should have at- 
tended to the second oe some 
time ago, while the third one, 
for Women’s Athletics, should 
have been paid last year. 

. Lastly, I should like to empha- 
size an inconsistency. With the 
exception of strictly routine 
items, no expenditures were 
made out of the Students’ Un- 
ion general account without the 
President, Secretary or Treas- 
urer of the Union first s:curing 
the sanction of the Council. In 
fact, Mr. Davies and I were 
taken, to task for having invest- 
ed the Union Reserve Fund in 
Province of Alberta 5 per cent. 
bonds. That is, the Council was 
either_told or insisted on being 
told of everything that happen- 
ed ta.the Union General Ac- 
count. It is a good and sound 
policy. This policy should be 
extended to include all depart- 
ments, 


Let me cite an example: The 
Union guaranteed the Oxford 
Debate to the extent fo $350. 
Yet the surplus from the proceeds 
went difect to the Literary As- 
sociation general account, and a 
good proportion of it was trans- 
ferred to some of the affiliated 
clubs of; the Association. The 
Council knew nothing of these 
transactions, I submit that busi- 
ness methods such as the above 
are rather inconsistent. 


UNION SECRETARY | 


One of the most useful invest- 
ments the Union made this year was 
a-steel file, The absence of such a 
file in the past may account for the 
scarcity of documents in the Stu- 
dents’ Union office. 

A cross-index system for filing all 
correspondence and documents was 
introduced. Mr. Mahaffy, the Sec- 
retary of the Union, collected the 
correspondence from the sub-organ- 
izations, and placed it. on file. This 
file with the centralized system of 
books kept by the Central Check 
should prove of assistance to future 
executives, 

I would suggest that the Secretary 
of the Union be made responsible to 
the Council for the organization and 
administration of the Rooters’ Club. 
* A log book for the Union should 
be kept, as well as a book in which 
all decorations awarded by the 


‘various clubs. and societies are en- 
‘tered 


for permanent record. The 
President and Secretary of the Union 
should either themselves keep or else 


It may be 


ointed. out that in the 


{past the President and Secretary of 

»|the Union were held responsible for 

de- wis enforcement of the Point System 
ct. ee : 


REPORT ON STUDEN 


‘| with a healthy balance after a finan- 
cial illness lasting for over. six years, 


THE GATEWAY 


TS UNION 


ized by any large individual capital 
expenditures, but collectively a con. 
siderable amount has been spent on 
permanent equipment by the various 
clubs, Gateway included, 


A financial report will be submit- 
ted to you presently. In discussing 
the Students’ Council I made a few 
suggestions by which some of the de- 
fects in our present system might be 
remedied. — : ; 

For the first time, the organiza- 
tions were required this year to sub- 
mit estimated income and expendi- 
tures for the session prior to the 
preparation of the budget in the fall. 
This was not done in all cases, and 
in some instances only very roughly. 
In view of the fact that no records 
were available for previous years, it 
was impossible to insist upon it. 


Occasionally an organization would 
request some extra money grant from 
the Council without bringing in a 
prepared statement of its financial 
standing and detailed reasons for its 
request. ‘ 

Again a few purchasing and paying 
requisitions were submitted for-sums 
and items which in the usual course 
of events would not have been sign- 
ed by the Central Check or Treas- 
urer and President of the Union with- 
‘out the approval of the Council. But 
this was allowed to pass as if un- 
observed because it was feared that 
friction and ‘unpleasantness ‘might 
be caused if too sudden a change 
from the old practice was insisted 
upon 

The situation has now changed; in 
the Central Check’s books will be 
found almost any information that 
may be required for future guidance. 


We prepared this year small cash 
books which the Treasurer started 
and issued to all tha organizations 
of the Union. This was done wiln 
the object of encouraging the keep- 
ing of books and the establishment 
of uniformity. 


Quite a number of the organiza- 
tions kept the books properly, but a 
number either did not keep books at 
all or at the end of the year made 
them up from the Central -Check’s 
books. But in spite of this there 
were more and better books kept this 
year than ever before. The most not- 
able example is the fine system ot 
books the Gateway kept this year as 
compared to the almost complete ab- 
sence of books in previous years. It 
would seem therefore that the criti- 
cism that the Central Check system 
might kill the incentive to keep books 
is not well taken. It might do so 
only where the incentive was already 
on the way to the grave. ~ 


The following are a few figures I 
have: taken from the books of the 
Central Gheck. They are rather in- 
teresting and I would suggest that 
the new Council appoint a committee 
this spring to look into them care- 
fully. Were it not for the Central 


Union Finances 


The year has not been character- Check system such: figures would not 


be available. 
1. About $1800 was spent on equip- 
ment by our organizations. Of 
this amount $480 or over one- 
fourth, was invested in Rugby 
equipment, — 
The Union will have paid to the 
University Printing Office this 
year about $2200. This includes 
the Gateway printing costs. © 
Men’s and Women’s Athletics 
paid out in guarantees $540. 
Men's and Women’s Athletics, 
the Literary Association, and 
the Gateway combined, spent 
about $200 on decorations 
awarded to members of the Un- 
‘ion for meritorious services. 
‘The travelling expenses of cur 
athletic and debating teams. this 
year amounted to $1330. OF 
this $980 was railway fares. 
Over $120 was spent on taxis, 
the Men’s Hockey Club being re: 
sponsible for over one-third of 
this amount. . 
At least $320 was spent by the 
Union organizations on advertis- 
ing. ..Hand-painted signs cost 
about $120. A sum of about 
140 was spent on newspaper 


2. 


advertising, the Literary. Asso- | 


ciation. being respqnsible 
$110 of it. 


My attention was frequently cal- 
led during the session to the fact that 
many student organizations never 
have their books audited, and that in 
mally cases the executives consider 
their files and records as personal 
property. Some of these organiza- 
tions such as the House’ Comnittee, 
Senior Year, Faculty Clubs, etc’, 
handle as much as $500 of stu- 
dent money. It might be well if the 
Union were to arrange for audit 
boards made up of senior Commerce 
students. Mr. Race, head of the De- 
partment of Commerce, and some of 
the senior students in Commerce I 
interviewed on the subject, favored 
the idea and promised their coopera- 
tion. The new Council will, I have no 
doubt, look into the matter, : 

I would also suggest that the new 
Treasurer of the Union interview Mr. 
West as to the possibility of the 
organizations not affiliated with tie 
Union drawing cheques on thvir ac- 
counts in the Bursar’s office. . 

Taken as a whole, the Union has 
had a successful year financially, To 
the Treasurer of the Union goes all 
the credit for keeping our Treasury 
in an up-to-date and well-balanced 
state all the time. Mr. Davies has 
worked hard all year and given the 
Union a tremendous amount of time. 
I cannot speak too highly of his ser- 
vices as Treasurer of the Union, Di- 
rector of the Year Book; or in the 
many ways in which he assisted me 
to carry out my duties. I feel quite 
certain that under his leadership, 
1925-26 will be a banner year for the 
Union. 


for 


_ THE GATEWAY 


The Gateway is one of the best 
established and best known of the 
Students’ Union organizations. It is 
widely read in our own University 
and greatly appreciated. Should it 
cease to exist the Union would 
greatly feel its loss and all of us 
would miss the many and ‘varied 
benefits we derive from it. In its 
pages we find a record of our doings, 
encouragement to carry on with our 
activities, and a constant effort to 
mould and guide student opinion. it 
may be said that in addition to the 
services it renders as a newspaper, 


The Gatéway serves as a link between 
The publication of a paper such as 
our various organizations. 


The Gateway is no easy task. It re- 
quires ability—natural and acquired 
—it necessitates constant effort and 
a tremendous amount-of time, it de- 
mands independent but considered 
and well-matured thinking. It is in 
my opinion, and I speak with a cer- 
tain amount of experience, the 
hardest task that is undertaken by 
any group of students. They have to 
work practically day in and day out 
continuously and cheerfully in spite 
of lack of copy, lack of the expected 
co-operation, and even in spite of 
severe criticism, which often is not 
justifiable. Contrary to most execu- 
tives, The Gateway staff have to 
work in the dark, so to speak, while 
they do their best to direct the at- 
tention of the world to the work that 
is being done by the executives of 
our various organizations. I take ad- 
vantage of this. opportunity to thank, 
on behalf of the Union, Mr. Bruce 
|Macdonald and Mr. Wesley Watts and 
their staffs for their valuable ser- 
vices, and to express to them our 
appreciation for the improvements 
they have introduced. These have 
certainly added to the interest of the 
publication. : 


The Business Manager of The 
‘Gateway, Mr. E. B, Wil8on ,has also 
submitted a report which exemplifies 
the business-like way in which he 
has carried on ever since the begin- 
ning of his association with The Gate- 
way. I well remember three years 
ago when, as Editor of The Gateway, 
I considered myself very fortunte to 
have secured his services as Assist- 
ant Advertising Manager. It is no 
exaggeration to say that it is largely 
due to his faithful and untiring ser- 
vices during the past three sessions 
that at last The Gateway finds itself 


Hearty congratulations and the 
thanks of the Union are due Mr, 
Wilson. ee oe 


In connection with The Gateway I 


SEE SSE VINE ae SE RS SC ia SS SERA Eee ES IRS SSE SE tt CES SE eek Rae ae 
Nn 


VICE-PRESIDENT 


The holder of the position of Vice- 
President of the Students’ Union has 
been practically always a woman stu- 
dent. ‘The main duties of the Vice- 
President, according to our constitu- 
tion, are to act as President of the 
Union and Council in the absence of 
the President. As this happens only 
on rare occasions, there is a danger 
of the position developing into an 
honorary one. 

I would suggest ve in future the 
Vice-President be made responsible 
to the Council for the Social Direc- 


torate, and that she be expected to] 


act as hostess on all occasions when 
the Union is entertaining visitors, 


and particularly in the preparation 
and arrangements for such entertain- 
ment. 


I would suggest also that the Vice- 
President keep in close touch with 
the undergraduate nurses at the 
University Hospital, and that ‘she 
make it a point of-seeing that they 
are not neglected by any of otr 
executives. The nurses are full mem- 
bers of the Students’ Union, and are 
therefore entitled to all the privi- 
leges that go with such membership. 
The nature of their work, coupled 
with the location of the Hospital, en- 
title them to special consideration. 


It would be well if the Vice-Presi- 
dent, the Treasurer and the” Secre- 
tary of the Union were to keep in 
mind the fact that, unlike the other 
members of the Council, they do not 
represent any particular organiza- 
tion. It should be their duty to be- 
come well acquainted with all mat- 
ters coming up for discussion at 
Union and Council meetings. On 
thém and the President of. the Union 
rests the greater share of the re- 
sponsibility of safeguarding the gen- 
eral interests of the Union. 


should like to make one criticism and 
two suggestions. 

y criticism is that part of the 
editorial and news staff of The Gate- 
way broke the unwritten tradition 
not to be actual sunvorters of one 
or more candidates at a Students’ 


Union election. — a 
My first suggestion is that it is 


‘perhaps inadvisable to comment edi-| ~ 


torially on a new topic or a subject 
not génerally known without first or 
concurrently printing in the news 
columns an unbiased account or 
statement, ga ese 
The other suggestion is that it 
might add to the interest of the paper 


if one “feature” of purely local in-|1V. Tickets and Gate Receipts. — 


terest were 


prepared and publishea 
regularly. ar ‘ ee 


For the first time ‘in its history, 
the Students’ Union this year employ- 


ORGANIZATIONS 19 


on 


FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1925, 


24-25 


Central Check System — 


ed a paid official at a cost of $300. 

This official is known as the “Central 

Check”, for lack of a better term. 
The Union handles large sums of 


money every year. This session the 


income from all sources was about 


$14,000. An expenditure of $300 
per session is well warranted if by 
So doing the administration of our 
affairs is placed on a business-like 
basis, Inquiry made last spring and 
first hand information revealed the 
appalling fact that no books had been 
kept by quite a number of our org- 
anizations. Certainly there were none 
to be found. 
this defect was essential. It is diffi- 
cult to demand of a Union Executive 
officer, that-certain things be done. 
Obyiously, a paid official was the 
only solution to the problem. 

The chief objects to be attained 
were: <* i . 

1; To have a central place where 
detailed information could be sécured 
about the financial standing of 
any or all of the élubs of the Union 
from time to time. 

_ 2, To keep a complete record of all 
financial transactigns in a form that 
would prove of value and assistance 
to future executives. 

3. To keep a complete inventory 
and record of all equipment. : 

4. To have a check on gate re- 
ee in the interest of all concern- 
ed. 
5. To insure against the Union or 
any part of it incurring liabilities 
which cannot be met. : 

It was at my suggestion that the 

Students’ Union saw fit to inaugur- 
ate last spring the “Central Check” 
system as an experiment for one 
year. Having fathered the idea and 
being responsible for its installation 
and operation, I feel it my duty tu 
present to you a compréhensive ac- 
count of the experiment. The scheme 
was not especially favored by some 
Since it was an innovation and in- 
volved the new idea of a paid offi- 
cial, The criticism of the system 
heard early in the session was partly 
deserved, but, most of it was not well 
taken, for closer investigation show- 
ed that it was founded on statements 
which were not entirely in accord- 
ance with the facts. The criticism, 
however, made us more careful and 
perhaps a little more efficient, 
The term “Central Check” is some- 
what of a misnomer. Indeed, I hasten 
to state that the holder of ‘the position 
has-no authority whatsoever. ‘He is 
responsible for carrying out the di- 
rections and instructions given him 
rom time to time by the President 
of the Union on the authority of the 
Council. ..He is purely and merely a 
paid official. ..He cannot and may not 
initiate any rurchasing or paying 
requisition. He has not the privilege 
of refusing to initial a requisition so 
long as the same has previously been 
approved by the Council. 

At the time of its inauguration last 

spring, our ideas on the working de- 

tails of the scheme were rather im 

mature. Cor-sideration of«the sys- 

tem last summer and the experience 
gained this winter make it possible 
to lay down definitely the princi- 
pal duties that fall on the shoulders 
of the Central Check. ; 

I have classified these duties under 

six heads: 

I. Equipment. . 

lin. Taking over of equipment from previous 
administration and tssuming responsi- 
bility for same’ until turned over to 
individual clubs. : 

Responsible that equipment is packed 

away properly for the summer, 

Report as to condition of equipment and 
especially as to repairs necessary prior 
to reissue. 

“To issue equipment to the various club 
presidents at the opening of their re- 
spective activities. 
To amend the inventories from time to 
time during the year as equipment is 
bought. 

Taking in from the presidents of the 
clubs, at the end of the season's ac- 
tivities, all equipment, and checking the 
same with the amended inventory men- 
tioned in (5). 

To make a report on losses and 
and wear for each club. 

Il. Books. : 

To keep a set of books for each and all 

the organizations of the Students’ Union 

reccrding y : . 

1, The financial standing of each orgat- 
ization. i : 
The original budget and subsequent 
grants and transfers made to the var- 

ious organizations. : 

To enter the estimated income and _ex- 
pénditure submitted to and approved by 
the Council, Y 

To keep a record of all purchasing requi- 
sitions issued and to see that the same 
are in accordance with (3) or subse- 
quent authority of the Council or the 
President of the: Union. © 


* 


y 


tear 


2. 
3. 


4, 


sitions. 
1. To sign Purchasing Requisition when 
. the organization issuing it has a credit 
balance and if such requisition is in 
accordance with the expenditures ap- 
proved by the Council, : 
2. To use his own discretion 
- where Purchasing Requisitions are sub- 
mitted but are not in accordance with 
the expenditures approved by the Coun- 
cil. But it should be provided, how- 
ever, that such a requisition should not 
exceed the sum of $10.00, or other 
similar sum agreed to by the Council; 
3. To initial Paying Requisitions if same 


To order the necessary number of : 
‘ets for any function under the Unien 


pe 


» 


A change to remedy | 


5. To keep a record of all expenditures. 

6. To keep a record of all receipts. 

7. To keep a record of the equipment, 
bought, with detailed prices. ‘ 

8, To keep special records of trips of 
_teams and functions such as the Ox- 
ford Debate so that they are available 
in a convenient form for future refer- 
ence. ; 

Ill. Purchasing and: Paying .Requi- 


in cases’ 


are covered by Purchasing Requisition. | 1 yy hesit 
heartily recommend that it be made 9 — 
the Union ad- | 


‘in accordance with Purchasing Requisi- 
tion received from the organization con- 
cerned. 

To issue the tickets, when ready to 
the organization concerned and secure 
a receipt for same indicating the num. 
ber and value of the tickets: If of 
different demnomination, the values to 
be shown separately. 

To be present at all Students’ Union 
fusictious,; including banqtcts at which 
an admission fee is charged, and to 
collect the tickets at the door, — 

To collect from the organization concern. 
ed the tickets left unsold. 

To prepare a statement for the Treas. 
urer of the Union showing, for each 
case : - 

(a) The total number of tickets is- 
: sued to the organization and their 
value. 

The total number of tickets col- 
lected at the door and their value. 
The total number of ‘tickets un- 
sold (returned) and their value. 
The total number of complimentary 
tickets issued and their value. 
handed in by the organization con. 
The total amount of money to be 
returned. : 

Gateway. 
1. As for all other organizations, to keep 
a record of its income and disburse- 
ments. 

With the issue of each number of the 


(b 


~— 


(c) 


(d) 


(e 


~~ 


t 


Gateway, to make a record on ¥ spe. 
cial form, of: ‘ 
» (a) The total number of inches of rea‘- 

ing matter, 2 ‘ 

(b) The total number of inches in 

cuts. } 

(c) The total number of inches of ad- 
vertising. 


(da). The total number -of inches by in- 
dividual advertisers. 

(e) The total cost per issue. 

(f) The total income due for adver- 
tising per issue. 

The total net cost of printing over 
advertising. ‘ 

A summary of the above for each 
month and at the end of the year. 
To make out statements of account, to 
address and mail ov deliver the same, 
and make collections for the Gateway 
on special occasions, such as during 
the examination periods. This work 
to be done only at the request of the 
Editor-in-chief and. Business Manager 
of the Gateway, provided tle Gateway 
‘contributes towards the Central Check’s 
salary. This request to be made to the 
President of the Union. 

VI. Other Duties. : 

1. To secure information re rai!way fares, 
time tables, etc. | 

To obtain quotations from various con- 
cerns re equipment, etc. 

Authority and Instructions. 

All instructions to the Central 
Check should be given by the Hresi- 
dent’ of the Union or through the 
President of the Union. 

The Central Check to be responsi- 
ble to the President of the Union 


(8) 


(h) 


2. 


only or to the Treasurer of the Union 


by special arrangement with the 
President. 
-It is true that the Central Check 
exercises no authority and that he 
may not deviate from the ordinary 
routine of his office without first 
consulting with the President of the 
Union, At the same time I should 
like to emphasize that the nature of 
the work brings him in contact with 
practically all the officers of the Un- 
ion and its affiliated organizations. 
He has to be tactful, always patient, 
showing good judgment and being 
careful and-guarded in the expres- 
sions of opinions or making of state- 
ments. ‘ 

To make sure that the system 
was given a fair chance to prove it- 


self, an effort was made to secure 


the cooperation of all, This was at 

times, done at the expense of efti- 

ciency—but it was done knowingly. 
I would suggest for the future: 

1. 
never make statements or ex- 
press. opinions without first con- 
sulting with the President of the 
Union. y 

-That he should not take an ac: 

. tive part in student activities. 
That -he should attend all meet- 
ings of the Council, but only in 
the capacity of observer and to 
supply information. - 

That he should have railway 
time-tables, price lists, etc., on 
hand. ; 

That the Central Check’s books 
be available to members of the 
Union only on. request being 
granted by the President, Treas- 
urer or Secretary of the Union, 
and_only at a time when the 
Central Check is not working on 
them. 

That all complimentary — tickets 
be marked as such by the. ex- 

_ecutives before issue and that 
the Central Check keep a record 
of these. 4 
That a request be made that bills 
against the Union be made out 
in duplicate, one to go direct to 


the Central Check and the other — 


in the usual course to the organ- 
ization concerned, oe 
That purchasing and paying 
requisitions be made in. tripli- 
eate, with the_object of, expedit- 
ing transactions and yet keep- 
ing the major organizations in- 
formed. 
That, with the ‘exception 
emergency purchases, purchas- 
ing requisitions be madq@ out 
prior to every purchase. — 
Emergencies are of course not of 
common occurrence, and the system 
should be elastic enough to take care 


of these. aes 


9. 


All of our organizations endorse 


the Central Check system. Only tw? 
weeks ago the Students’ Cc 
unanimously voted in favor of it. 


has more than justified itself, and the 


benefits to be derived from it have 
pe fn Sy the expectations of its sup: 
orters. Without any hesitation, I 


permanent part of 
ministration, _ eo eek 


ee 


That the Central Check as such | 


of 


_ PRIDAY, MAY 15, 1925. 


| able to do full 
; this report. 


. acquainted, 


Men’s Athletic Association | COVERED RINK | 


Owing to the late hour at which 


, the reports from the various athletic 


clubs reached me, I regret I am un- 
justice to them in 


Of Dr. Hardy, Hon. President of 


the Men’s Athletic Association, it 


is difficult to say enough. He has 


| been not only a tower of strength to 
» our Athletic Association, but he has 


ungrudgingly given of his time to 
help practically every phase of stu- 
dent activities. He is largely re- 


- sponsible for the high state of effi- 


ciency our senior hockey team reach- 
ed this year. We have in Dr. Hardy 


a real friend; 


As in previous years, Mr. J. Bill 


| has again’come to our assistance as 


rugby and basketball coach. This 


' tireless gentleman, is always full of 
enthusiasm for good sport, and has 
| been injecting the same spirit into 


our teams for many years past, We 
are certainly fortunate to have been 
able to take advantage of ‘his long 
experience and ability in athletics. 


- We are greatly indebted to Mr. Bill. 


The members of the Athletic 


| Association executive, as well as the 
members of all our teams, are to be 


congratulated for the splendid way 
in which they have carried our stand- 


| ard and fought for it on the rugby 
field, basketball floor, hockey rink, 
- boxing and wrestling rings, swim- 


ming pool, tennis courts and track 
meets. : 

Mr. F. W. Barclay has been asso- 
ciated with the Athletic Association 
ever since he entered the University. 
There is hardly any phase of its ac- 
tivities with which he is not well 
His long experience in 
student activities has been of great 


- yalue to his colleagues in the Coun- 


cil. He has piloted efficiently the 
ship of Men’s Athletics, and I am 


- gure we all extend to him our con- 


gratulations. My only criticism of 
him is that he cannot see the wisdom 
of failing in a few final examina- 
tions so he may serve the Union for 
another year. ; : 

In his repotft tthe President of 
Men’s Athletics, Mr. F. W. Barclay, 
states: “That success in athletics is 


' not to be measured by the number 


of championships won. It is as much 


a suecess to lose well, since this 


should be one of the outstanding 


characteristics of a good sportsman. 


The year has been one of building. 


It is quite true that. this year we 
have not won many honors in ath- 
letics. "We. have, however, partici- 
pated in every kind of sport, and all 
our organizations have expanded 
their activities. Undoubtedly we are 
closing the year with all our clubs 
supplied with equipment better than 
ever before. Further, as a result of 
the building up that went on this 
season, our teams should make a 
splendid showing next year. — 

The Men’s Athletic Association is, 
of course, our greatest spending de- 
partment. It will, perhaps, be years 
before it becomes a source of revenue 
to the Students’ Union. But at the 
same time it may be suggested that 
the athletic organizations could have 
been more careful about financial 
matters. On the whole, their bud- 
gets were not as well prepared nor 
were their books as well kept as by 


other organizations. With the assist-" 


ance of the books kept by the Central 
Check this year there should be no 
excuse for loose budgeting in the 
future. © Site oe 
We have made good progress in 
improving the -equipment of our 
clubs, But there is great room for 
improvement in the management of 
the technical work in athletics. We 
have been paying far too little atten- 
tion to our junior teams. We do not 
think of them seriously as centres 
for the development of material for 
our senior teams. We depend far too 
much on the experienced ‘athletes we 


' may or may not find among the 


Freshman class of each academic 
year. This system may be likened to 
&@ university which neglected its own 
reshmen and Sophomores, but con- 
centrated on its students who had 
completed their junior work at other 
universities. ‘The quality, of the 
graduating classes in such a univer- 
sity would depend to a large extent 
on the work done at other institu- 
tions. I submit that it would be to 
our advantage, and certainly to our 
credit, if we organized some system 
by which we could keep a constant 
stream of athletes moving up from 
Junior to senior teams. 


RUGBY 


Mr, Krause and Mr. M. Gale, Pre- 
sident. and Manager of the rugby 


Sy 


the Union treasury than any other 
activity. I would strongly recom- 
mend that more emphasis be placed 
on the technical side of the game. 
There seems to be a desire every 
year to have a senior team of cham- 
pionship calibre. This is a worthy 
ambition, but perhaps a little too 
high. How can we possibly expect 
to realize such an fest ap when we 
remember that the rugby season is 
extremely short, that rugby is not 
generally played in the high schools 
of the province, and that the number 
of experienced rugby players in an 
average Freshman class is limited? 
Ts it not possible that our ambition 
would come to closer realization if 
we were to pay more attention to 
inter-taculty teams with the chief 
objects of stimulating interest in the 
game and developing players for the 
senior team? By paying more atten- 
tion to inter-faculty rugby the future 
of the senior team will be ensured. 
I would suggest that for a while, at 
least, say a year or two, we place the 
best technical assistance we have at 
the disposal of the inter-faculty 
teams. Let us establish a system of 
building up. material rather than de- 
pend almost entirely on mature ma- 
terial we may get from outside 
sources. During the past four or 
five years the inter-faculty teams 
have had to fight. hard to get a share 
of the available equipment, and to 
my knowledge they have received lit- 
tle or no technical assistance. To 
be a little more specific: I would 
suggest that Mr. Bill-be requested to 
coach the inter-faculty teams, paying 
special attention to probable good 
material for the senior team. 


HOCKEY 


In his report Mr. MacMillan, Pre- 
sident of the Hockey Club, refers to 
the difficulties he encountered in 
trying to secure a sheet of ice for his 
team to practise on. In this con- 
nection, ne remarks: 

“Tt is at such a time at this that 
the. necessity of having~a covered 
rink of our own is seen. More prac- 
tices could then be held, and our 
revenue from games would be 
greater, Given proper facilities a 
team such as our senior team of this 
year could be developed into Allan 
Cup calibre in a few seasons. It will 
be impossible for the Hockey Club 
to achieve distinction and excellence 
without a Varsity rink.” 

Inter-Faculty Hockey 

There being no rink on the campus 
this year, the Inter-faculty League 
was in a rather difficult position. 
Mr. Terence Agnew, Chairman of the 
League, had no place on which his 
teams could practice or play games. 
The Students’ Council made a special 
money grant to the League to enable 
them to arrange for the use of the 


South: Side covered rink three hours’ 


a week, 
~ BASKETBALL 


The remarks I ventured to make 
with reference to the coaching and 
training of junior rugby teams apply 
with equal force to basketball. This 
year the senior basketball team found 
itself without the services of four 
or five of its best players of the pre- 
vious year. I am inclined to think 
‘that not enough attention is paid to 
the junior teams as training centers 
for the senior team. Some arrange- 
ments by which the valuable services 
of Mr. Bill as coach could be diverted 
in part from the senior to the junior 
teams might prove a solution of the 
difficulty. ; 


WOMEN’S ATHLETICS 


The Women’s Athletic Association 
is gradually developing from a minor 
to a major organization in the Union. 
This is due in part to the arrange- 
ments which have been. made for 
inter-university, inter-faculty and 

{other competitions in girls’ athletics, 
and to the efficient work of the 
various executives. Miss Beth Cas- 
well, President of the Association, 
has certainly worked conscientiously 
throughout the session. She and the 
executive are to be congratulated for 
having this year expanded the field 
of action of their organization, and 
for placing it on a sound business- 
like basis. The following summary 
of Miss Caswell’s report is an indi- 
cation of her efficiency and grasp of 
the work of the organization she 
headed: ay 

The Women’s Athletic Association 
presented to the Council last fall a 
“minutely detailed account” of their 
ee expenditure for the year’s 
work. 


The other major organizations of 


team respectively, looked after the|the Union, MissCCaswell points out, 


interests of the organization mo 
efficiently. Thanks to their hearty 
co-operation and the Central Check 
system all equipment was turned in 
at the end of the season. 

Mr, Krause points out that a good 
Senior team can be had only when 
the Inter-faculty' teams are well de- 
veloped. He suggests that sufficient 
equipment be bought to outfit com- 
pletely two inter-faculty teams in ad- 
dition to the equipment required for 
the senior team. ‘Two other recom- 
mendations are made by Mr. Krause. 
One, that no admission fee be 
charged to inter-faculty games, ex- 
cept, perhaps, in the final’ series; 
and, two, that the system of loaning 


equipment to other clubs be discon- 


tinued, 


There are a few remarks I should 


like to make ein connection with 
. Tugby which apply equally well to a 
_ Number of athletic clubs. 


t _It seems 
to me that far too much emphasis is 


placed on equipment. .The Rugby 


Club has been carrying on quite suc- 


cessfully for many years, and: yet at 
| No time in its history was it as well 


Supplied with equipment as it was 


this year. Not less than $480.00 was. 
: oe on equipment this session, and 


out $400.00 last session. When 


A 

the shortness of the, season, as well 
| 4s the extremely limited time avail- 
able for training prior to the com- 


Mencement of league games, are 
taken into consideration, rugby re- 


| ceives more favorable treatment from 


‘| did not submit similar estimates with 


the result that all organizations, re- 
gardless of their claims to exception, 
were forced to submit toa 25 per 
cent. cut. This would have caused a 
tremendous inconvenience to her or- 


ganization were it not for the fact| — 


that the Council later on allowed her 
an additional grant of about $200.00. 


FRESHMAN CLASS 


Practically the first duty I had to 
attend to on taking office as Presi- 
dent of the Union last spring was to 
find ways and means for the Fresh- 
man Year to meet their financial ob- 
ligations. Their books showed a de- 
ficit of $60.00.. To insure against a 
similar occurrence this spring I called 
the Freshmen together last fall, and 
suggested to them the paying of class 
fees then to the Treasurer of the 
Union. The money was to be turned 
over to the Freshman Year Hxecu- 
tive, which is usually elected in Jan- 
unary. This was carried out to the 
satisfaction of all concerned. The 
Freshmen closed their books this year 
with a good balance to their credit. 
Mr. Piper 
states in his 


of much worry and anxiety, and re- 
commends that the same thing be 
done every year. — ee 


a 


President of the Class,| 
report that the early col-| — 
lection of fees relieved his executive 


THE GATEWAY 


On several occasions this session 
the covered rink was fully discussed 
at Students’ Union meetings. The ad- 
visability of having’ a covered rink 
on the campus is unquestionable. The 
need for such a building is felt for 
four and one-half months of each 
academic year. The result of our 
discussions may be summarized into 
one word—-Action. The Union can 
now conclude its year’s work with the 
feeling of having decided to act im- 
mediately in what we consider is in 
the best interests of the University 
and the students. Our action means 
that the students are willing to play 
a small but nevertheless tangible 
rat in the development of our Alma 

ater. 


The President of the University 
and the Board of Governors look 
with favor on the scheme, and will, 
I have no doubt, do everything pos- 
sible to further it. The members of 
the Union and the executives of our 
organizations are prepared to give of 
their time and energy until the cov- 
ered-rink becomes a reality. 


Out of this year’s Students’ Union 
surplus the sum of about $600.00 is 
earmarked for the Rink Fund. After 
all collections have been made, it is 
hoped that $100.00 from The Gate- 
way and $75.00 from the Year Book 
will be set aside for the same purpose. 

The total amount in the Fund at 
the beginning of next session should 
be in the neighborhood of $1,000.00. 


SOCIAL DIRECTORATE 


For the first time in the history 
of the Students’ Union a_ Social 
Directorate of a temporary nature 
Was inaugurated this session. 


~ After a more or less thotough dis- 

cussion by the Students’ Council in 
the spring of 1924, it was agreed 
that a Social Directorate, consisting 
of students, was desirable. 


~The Students’ Council did not 
deem it wise to allot the Directorate 
any share in the budget at the be- 
ginning of the session, The ex- 
penses for entertainment were to be 
borne by the organizations concerned. 
The Council appointed as members 
of the Directorate, Miss Helen Mann- 
ing, Mr. Charles Richert and Mr. 
James Brunton, the last mentioned to 
act as chairman, 


In spite of many difficulties, some 
of which will be mentioned below, the 
Social Directorate performed _ its 
function fairly efficiently and the 
managers of our organizations appré- 
ciated the assistance they received 
from it on the various occasions when 
it was hteir privilege to ‘entertain 
visiting teams. I must hasten to in- 
form you, however, that by the end 
of October Mr, Brunton had sent in 
his resignation as chairman and 
member of. the Directorate, His 
main reason was, I believe, that he 
did not receive the hearty co-oper- 
ation he expected from certain 
sources.’ Mr. Richert, although he 
never resigned, was not an active 
member of the committee. You will 
observe, then, that for the greater 
part of the session Miss Manning was 
the sole member of the Directorate— 
that is, she was three in one. She 
carried on in her usual calm, effi- 
cient and willing manner without a 
word of complaint. Our thanks are 
due to the two men members of the 
Directorate for their services during 
the first part of October; but it is 
to Miss Helen Manning in particular 
that I extend on behalf of the Union 
very hearty thanks and congratula- 
tions for her ability in securing«the 
co-operation of so many of her fel- 
low-students. : 

The members of the Social Direc- 
torate, that is,-Miss Manning, has 
three criticisms to offer: That on 
several occasions the Directorate was 
not ‘informed early enough of the 
date of arrival of the visiting teams, 
that some of our organizations made 
certain= arrangements without con- 
sulting the Directoraté, and that 
there were too few in the Directorate. 


The Social Directorate is one of: 
the most important committees we 
have. The favorable or unfavorable 
impressions of our University that 
visitors carry away with them may 
largely depend on the efficiency or 
inefficiency with which the Director- 
ate performs its duties. 

I wish to make the following re- 
AE Seal as a result of my ob- 
servation this year in connection with 
the Social Directorate: 


That the Council should look with 
disfayor on any student who resigns 
an office to accept another, unless 
the Council or the Union think that 
a mistake was made in his appoint- 
ment to the first position, or that he 
will be of greater service in the 
second office. 


The executive of the Literary Asso- 
ciation, of which Mr. W. Herbert is 
the President and Mr, C. S. Camp- 
bell, the secretary, are to be con- 
gratulated on the splendid innova- 
tions added to the programme of 
activity, See 

The Literary Association proper 
report on their year’s activities as 
follows: | 


The noted Danish violinist, Skovy- 
gaard, was brought to Convocation 
Hall. This event was well supported, 
and proved quite popular with the 
student body. ; 

On March 18th a “Lit Night”, con- 
sisting of a musical evening, brought 
to a close the Students’ Union elec- 
tion campaign. The programme, 
made up of numbers by the Glee 
Club and Orchestra, proved most. en- 
joyable to one of the largest audi- 
ences that have ever attended a Lit. 
Night. 


As in past year, the Literary Asso- 
ciation co-operated with the Depart- 
ment of Extension in arringing the 
Won Ga High School Debating 

inals, 


The recommendations of the Liter- 
ary Association are: 


That future Literary Association 
executives may render a service by 
bringing to the University from time 
to time outside artists of merit. 


It is hardly necessary to outline in 
a report such as this the valuable and 
important part the Dramatic Society 
plays in the student activities of the 
University of Alberta. Its history is 
as old as the Union and is therefore 
well known to all of us. Besides en- 
couraging the study and appreciation 
of the drama through a few well- 
chosen and prepared ‘readings’, the 
society aims at the development of 
dramatic art among the students by 
the presentation of four one-act plays 
early in the session and one big play 
during the second term... __ 

Mr. L. D. Hyndman, President--of 
the Society, submitted one of the 
few full reports that were received 
this year. He reviews the year’s ac- 
tivities, dwells on the difficulties 
which had to be overcome, mentions 
the policy adopted and makes sugges- 
tions and recommendations for the 
future.. 

First of all, on behalf of the 
Students’ Union, I join the executive 
of the Literary Association in ac- 
knowledging with thanks the kind ser- 
vices and loyal. assistance rendered 
the Dramatie Society by Professor 
James Adam, and I congratulate Mr. 
Hyndman and his able associates as 
well as the actors and actresses of 
the various dramatic productions for 
their splendid work during the year. 

Professor Adam is not only inter- 
ested in dramatic work, and always 
willing to help the Dramatic Society, 
but he is perhaps the only one on 
the campus who in addition to his 
experience in the direction of plays 
has the necessary ability to plan, 
design and actually prepare stage 
costumes and scenery. His services 
are indeed invaluable. But we must 
be careful not to overload a willing 
horse. This brings me to my first 
criticism of the Dramatic Society. 

In the past most of the responsi- 
bility and hardest work in.the Dra- 
matic Society seemed’ to fall on the 
shoulders of the Honorary President. 
I do not quite know where to look 
for the origin of this unprecedented 
custom, but the result has been that 
last October the Dramatic Society 
had great difficulty in finding any 
one who was willing to accept the 
so-called honorary position of Hon- 
orary President: Indeed, although 
not part of my duties, I went to see 
Professor Adam myself. I explain- 
ed that we. would consider ourselves 
fortunate if he would accept the 
Honorary Presidency of the Dramatic 
Society, and that as holder of that 
position he would act in an advisory 
capacity only. Should the Dramatic 
Society, later on, wish to secure his 
services as director of the big play, 
they would request him to do so not 
as their Honorary President, he would 


refuse to consider it, 

Another criticism I wish to make 
is with reference to the tendency in 
the past—although not to the same 
extent this session—the tendency for 
the Dramatic Society to follow a 
course independent of the rest of the 
Students’ Union except perhaps at 
the time of the year when the budget 
is being prepared. . : ; 

A third observation is that during 
the preceding three sessions the Dra- 
matic Society cannot boast of even a 
really good audience at its big plays, 
let alone a full house, and this in 
spite of the fact that in the spring 
of 1923 ‘Dear Brutus” was produced 
—one of the best plays the Dramatic 
Society has ever undertaken. It may 
be advisable to drop the idea of pro- 
ducing the play on two successive 
nights—at least for one year. 

Contrary to all precedent in other 
student érganizations, the Dramatic 
Society pays students who assist be- 
hind the curtain. This is only a small 
item of expenditure, but it is with 
|the principle that I disagree. There 
are many other students whose ser- 
vices are as valuable, but are not re- 
cognized in this fashion. Further, I 
happen to know that one of the stage 
hands this year was surprised to re- 
ceive a cheque, and was not particu- 
larly pleased to get it. Raat 

I have therefore the following sug- 
gestions to make: nee Se 

That the executive of the Dramatic 
Society keep in mind the fact that 


- HAS DONE GOOD WORK 


dents’ Union organization acts only 
{in an advisory capacity uriless he es- 
' |pecially wishes to act in any other 
VV ORDEC ia 

|. That the Dramatic Society is a 
_|Students’ Union organization, and 
- |therefore every student a member of 


FW. BARCLAY 
President of Athletics — 


Literary Association 


Dramatic Societ 


be free to accede to the request or |P 


the Honorary President of any Stu-| 


2 


That the big play by the Dramatic 
Society should be staged on one night 
only. © ‘ : 


To the above suggestions I add: . 

That after the Students’ Union 
general elections a meeting of the 
Literary Association be held—-similar 
to that of the Athletic Association— 
at which the executives of all its 
affiliated clubs are elected. - 


That the Literary Association hold | 


an annual banquet towards the end 
of the session similar to that held by 
the Athletic Association. This ban- 
quet to include The Gateway and 
Year Book organizations. At this 
banquet all decorations awarded by 
the Literary Association, its affiliated 
clubs and The Gateway to be pre- 
sented. The Literary Association to 
extend one invitation to an Athletic 
Association representative, | who 
would propose the toast to the Liter- 
ary Association, the Athletic Asso- 
ciation to reciprocate. This may tend 
to bring a better understanding be- 
tween the two chief departménts of 
the Students’ Union. . 

That the Literary Association ex- 
ecutive must be more than a figure- 
head. It must: exercise a greater 
control over the policy and finances 
of its affiliated clubs. This year one 
of the clubs incurred liabilities up to 
and exceeding $50.00 without first 
securing the consent of the major or- 
ganization. This is detrimental to 
the best interests of the Union. 


it; elections should be held in  ac- 
cordance with the suggestions made 
in this report under the heading Lit- 
erary Association. 

That no annual Dramatic Society 
banquet be held. 

That the big play be produced in 
Convocation Hall only one night for 
various reasons, the chief of which 
is that it is, in my opinion, far better 
to play one night to one good warm 
house instead of two nights — the 
the first night to a diminutive and 
cold audience, and the second night 
to an audience only fairly good in 
numbers with the risk of a chilly at- 
mosphere. A dress rehearsal at 
which the returned men from the Uni- 
versity Hospital are_invited free of 
charge may overcome one of the dif- 


ficulties mentioned by Mr. Hyndman: ; 


Further, the danger of the public not 
supporting the second performance is 
as great as the possibility that they 
may turn out to it-in-large numbers. 

That the expenditures of the Dsa- 
matie Society be limited— 

(a) To the estimated budget sub- 
mitted by it at the beginning of the 
session; and 

(b)'To twenty per cent. of its sur- 
plus at the end of the season’s acti- 
vities, provided the Literary Asso- 
ciation executive in session pass on 
such~expenditure. SA is 

That the Dramatie «Society and 
Litexary Association consider care- 
fully the advisability and possibility 
of producing the big play in some 
of the. towns near Edmonton, either 
during the Christmas holidays or 
during the first two or three weeks 
after the spring examinations. The 
reasons for such a suggestion are: 

(a) To bring the University before 
the public in some Literary Associa- 
tion activity as well as in Athletic 
contests; and 

(b) -To take good dramatic plays 
to communities that normally have 
no opportunities of enjoying good 
productions: : 

The findings of the Literary Asso- 
ciation in this matter should be sub- 
mitted to the Council and the Com- 
mittee on Student Affairs for final 
decision. 

That if the suggestion is considered 
favorably no one be allowed to take 

art in the play except those who 
re willing to sacrifice their 
Christmas holidays or a part of the 
month of May. 


BURSAR’S OFFICE 


\ I would be failing in my duty were 
I to turn over the reins of office 
without telling this meeting of the 
great amount of work done for us 
in the Bursar’s office. Hardly a day 
asses but what some member of your 
executive goes up for some informa- 
tion, suggestion, advice or request. 
Every cheque issued by the Union 
is made out in Mr. West’s office, and 
forwarded to its destination. You can 
well imagine that this is no small 
task since our turnover is so large. 
A record of all cheques issued as well 
‘as of all our accounts is kept by the 
Bursar, He does all the banking for 
us. For the convenience of students 
many private accounts are\ opened 
every year, in addition to the ac- 
counts kept for Faculty and Year 


Organizations. Excluding the Union 


funds, between $80,000 and $90,000 
a year is handled for the students in 
the Bursar’s office. : : 

To Mr. West we are greatly in- 
debted. He is always ready to help 
us, arid indeed is continuously help- 
ing us. The splendid system of books 
kept by The Gateway this year; The 
Gateway records kept by the Central 
Check. were suggested and- actually 
started by Mr. West himself. He 
kindly consents to audit our books 
and helps our Treasurer prepare his 
financial statement. In the last 
week he has spent two or three long 
evenings in his office working on our 
books, ether. we try to measure 
the assistance Mr. West gives us in 
money, convenience or kindness, our 
debt to him is a great one. : 

The Union is thankful to him for 
the many services he has been ren-| 
dering us for many, years. _Person- 
x 


behalf of the Council, representative — 


and the other members of 
great debt of gratitude to Professors 


and 


University staff for their ready = 


ciety executive in bo idence 
preciation of the va 
these gentlemen. 


ding ever 
of course, the debate with the 
sentatives of Oxford. The 
was held in the Empire Theatr 
auditorium being filled to its ft 
capacity. It is perhaps safe to sa: 
that the Students’ Union have neve 
before brought the University to th 


On several occasions during 1 
session we listened with pleasure 


energy. The success of the Orchestra 
is due to her fine qualities of co: 
ductorship and to her valuable se 
vices. I should also like to bring to 
your attention the continued interest 
in the Orchestra shown by Miss — 
Gretta Simpson, who graduated last 
year from the University of Alberta. 
To Miss Simpson, as well as to the 
“overtown” members of the Or- — 


chestra we extend our thanks. 


The President of the Orchestra re-_ 
ports that during the session the Or- 
chestra gave seven public perform- 
ances—two in the Red Cross Hut at. 
the University Hospital and five in 
Convocation Bale oc See. 

He suggests that there should be 
close co-operation between the Or- 
chestra and the Glee Club and that 
the student body as a whole should ~ 
show. a greater interest in the Or-- 
chestra and that the conductor es- — 
pecially should receive more public 


recognition from the students. 
Personally, I agree with the sug- 
gestions, but I should like to point 
out that the executive of the Or-_ 
chestra is perhaps a little at fault. 
Only once during the past five © 
years a motion was introduced at a 
Students’ Union meeting directing — 
that a letter of thanks be sent to © 
the conductor of the Orchestra, who 
at that time was Mr. V. Barford. The 
mover of that motion was not a mem- 
ber of the Orchestra or the execu- — 
tive, but the writer of this report. In — 
my opinion it is the duty of all ex- 
ecutives to bring to the notice of the 
members of the Union the services _ 
they wish to have recognized, Fur- 
ther, the executive of the Orchestra — 
this year decided to recognige the 
services of their conductor with a 
presentation:~~Is-it-possible that the 
recipient of such a_ presentation — 
would have appreciated it more had 
the Orchestra executive consulted the 
Literary Association executive and 
the Students’ Union before it took 
any action? I believe the answer 
is in the affirmative, for the pre- — 
sentation would have been made on 


of the student body, as well as on 
behalf of the Orchestra itself. In- 

cidentally it would have been more 
constitutional to do so. ee 


The same rematks apply 
well to the Glee Club. 


GLEE CLUB 


“This year,” the report from Mr. — 
Cc. K. Johns, thee President of the — 
Glee Club, reads, ‘we were very for- _ 
tunate in again obtaining the services — 
of Mr. L. H. Nichols as leader, and 
thus were able to carry on the good © 
work commenced the previous ~ ses- 
sion. Regular weekly practices were 
held, commencing early in October, — 
and continued on until the 28rd of 
March, when the activities of the 
Club were rounded off for the season 
by putting on a: programme to be 
broadcasted by the Edmonton Jour- 
male? SHC GO Mae ge oes 

It is impossible to emphasize suf- 
ficiently the great amount of time 
and energy Mr. Nichols devoted to 
this work. The Glee Club owes its 
existence to him. He reawakened it 
from a prolonged sleep lasting overa = 
period of years. This is only one of = 
the many ways in which Mr. Nichols 
shows his interest in the student 
body, and his willingness to help us. — 
The Students’ Union appreciates his 
services and extends to him hearty 
and sincere thanks, = 


equally ak 


eee 


DEBATING SO 


to the energy and effort of Mr, ©. K. 
Johns, the President of the ee 


executive, 


The Debating Society is unc 


Macdonald, Alexander, Hardy, Burt, 
Broadus, Gordon, Long, MacGibbon, 
Messrs. Cameron and Drummond, 
and to many other members of the 


sympathetic assistance. The 
dents’ Union joins the Debatin; 


uable 


The 


most outstandi 


‘i 


Lets 8 


PAGE SIX 


EARLY ALLOCATION | 


RESIDENCE ROOMS 


Deposits Must Be In By Sept. 5 
——~Rooms in Great Demand 


That residence accommodation will 
be utilized to the fullest extent next 
year, as 8 consequence: of the reduc- 
tion in board and the preferential 
treatment to be aecorded resident 


students by the University, is the 
opinion expressed by the new chair- 
man of the House Committee, Bruce 
Macdonald. Rooms have already been 
assigned to those “living in" this 
year, so that in case of a shortage 
of rooms they may be provided for. 


Applications forms were filled out 
before the end of the term by those 
desiring accommodation in Athabasca 
and Assiniboia Halls, and a pro- 
visional allotment has now been 
made. In an interview with The 
Gateway, Mr. Macdonald pointed out 
that the allotment thus made, how- 
ever, is provisional upon the appli- 
eant forwarding a deposit of $12 to 
the Bursar of the University on or 
before September 5th, when the 
rooms will be definitely reserved for 
those who have forwarded deposits. 
It will be presumed that those who 
have not sent in their deposits by 
that date do not desire rooms, and 
the rooms reserved for them will be 
immediately given out to others in- 
cluded in the provisional allotment 
who have sent in deposits and had ap- 
pled for these rooms, but were un- 
able to obtain them before. All re- 
maining rooms will then be reserved, 
regardless of previous allotment, for 
other applicants who will be consid- 
ered in order of application with de- 
posit. As this plan has been agreed 
upon with the University authorities, 
and will be strictly adhered to, it is 
important that deposits be sent in on 
time. 


Mr, Macdonald has found it a very 
difficult task to allot the rooms to 
everyone’s satisfaction, having in 
mind at the same time the best in- 
terests of the whole resident body, as 
so many have applied for the same 
rooms. The injunction of the House 
Committee to show preference to 
Seniors in every case, and to those 
applying for their old rooms, has been 
faithfully carried out, and where it 
waa absolutely inipossible tu choose 
between students of equal standing, 
tossing a coin has been the usual 
method adopted to solve the diffi- 
by the chairman on September 5th 
culty. While the assignment made 
must be considered as final, neces- 
sary changes may be made through- 
out the year at the discretion of the 
House Committee. 


As a consequence of the reduction 
in the board and room to $37, and 
the further concessions to resident 
students recently decided upon by the 
Board of Governors, it is anticipated 
that rooms in residence will be at a 
premium next year. Early application 
by new students for accommodation 
is therefore imperative. 


The new House Committee which 
was elected during the latter part of 
March consists of ; Bruce Macdonald, 
chairman; Bill Mueller, secretary- 
treasurer; Walter Herbert and 
“Aubs’’ McMillan. 


INTERNATIONAL 
DEBATE POSTPONED 


Will Take Place in February In- 


stead of October—Alberta $ 


Picks Strong Team 


News that the next Imperial de- 
bate has been postponed from Oct. 
8, 1925 to February, 1926, came like 
a bolt from the blue, several weeks 
ago, to the many students who were 
looking forward to enjoying this de- 

ate. 


The Hritish team, which has al- 
ready been chosen, is composed of 
one representative fre~ each of Ox-! 
ford, Cambridge, Edinburgh and Dub-| 
lin Universities, They will probably 

2 somewhat of the same type of men 
and debaters that delighted the huge 
crowd at the Oxford-Alberta debate 
last year. Alberta’s debaters were 
chosen by ai group of competent 
judges at an excellent try-out held 
before the close of the term, when 
seventeen of the University’s best 
debaters tried out for the honour. 
They are Walter Herbert, twice 
president of the Literary Associa- 
tion; Editor-elect of The Gateway, 
and prominent in the Students’ Par. 
hament and the dehating  suciety. 
Clarence Campbell, president-elect 
of the Literary Association, inter- 
university debater, manager of the 
last Oxford Debate, Premier Stu- 
dents’ Parliament, etc.; Jimmy Man- 
son, a dark-horse, who fought his way 
to fame and fortune this year by 
helping win three debates and the in- 
ter-faculty championship for the Ag- 
gies. In ease of either of these be- 
ing unable to speak, two extremely 
capable substiuttes will be ready to 
jump into the breach, these being 
Percy Davies, president-elect of the 
Studenta’ Union, and Don MacKen. 
wie, a born inter-varsity. debater and 
provincial debating champion while 
at High School. 

The subject of the debate will be 
announced later. 


LAW CLUB ELECTIONS 


The Law Club elections, which 
were held shortly before lectures 
closed for the year, resulted in the 
following being elected to the execu- 
tive for 1925-26: President, Bruce 
Macdonald (by acclamation); Vice- 
President, W. B. Cromarty; Secre- 
tary, Miss Mildred Hamon; Treaa-' 
urer, K. R. (Col.) Jamieson. : 


Survey shows many Student 
Executives for 1925-26 


No Less Than 22 Organizations, With 145 Executive Officers, 
Are Operating Under Students’ Union 


With a view to providing some 
source of reference to the various 
clubs organized among the students 
of the university, the Gateway re- 
cently undertook a survey of these 
various organizations, 

The task proved larger than at 
first anticipated. The results of the 
survey are given below. 

Twenty-two different, separate and 
distinct student organizations will 
claim 145 students for executive po- 
sitions next term. This is not ag 
astounding as it appears, since many 
students will fill two, three or oven 
four positions at the same time. On 
the other hand the figures given 
above exclude those organizations 
which either are not prepared to an- 
nounce their executives this spring or 
are mentioned elsewhere on this 
page. 

Anyway, here they are: 

1925-——1926 
STUDENTS’ COUNCIL 
President—Percy Davies. 
Vive-President---Marjorie Sherlock. 
Secretary-——Bob Mitchell. 
reasurer—tirnie Wilson. 
Pres. Lit. Assoc.—Clarence 
bell. 
Sec. Lit. Assoc.—Helen McQueen. 
Pres. Wauneitas-~Bertha McCallum. 
Sec. Wauneitas—-Betty Lynch-Staun- 


Camp- 


ton. 

Pres. Men’s Athletics—Chff Oster- 
land. 
Sec, Men’s Athletics—-Aubs MeMil- 
lan. 

Pres. Women’s Athletics—-Dorothy 
MeNicholl. 

See. Women’s Athletics—Jean Fol- 
kins. 


Editor Gateway—-~Walter Herbert. 

Bus. Manager Gateway—Stan Ross. 

Repres. Men’s  Athletics—-Harold 
Ferguson. 

Repres. Men’s Athletics—Keith Muir. 

Repres. Lit. Assoc.—To be appointed 
in Fall. 

Repres. Lit. Assoc.—To 


be appointed 
in Fall. a | 


MEN’S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 

vresident— Cliff Osterland. 

Vice-Pres.—Harold Ferguson. 

Secretary-—Aubrey McMillan. 

Pres. Rugby—Mel Gale. 

Pres. Track—Aubrey Bright. 

Pres. Basketball—Keith Muir. 

Pres. Hockey-—Bill Whittaker. 

Pres. Soccer—Bob Brynildsen. 

Pres. Baseball—Len Cockle. 

Pres. Bobinx——Stan Barker. 

Pres. Swimming-——Charlie Waldo. 

Pres. Tennis——Jack Gerrie. 

Chairman [nter-Faculty Hockey— 
Jack Hunter. 

Chairman House League Basketball— 
Baden Powell. 


ARTS AFFECTED BY 
NEW REGULATIONS 


Honors Requirements May Be 
Raised—Rulings on Lan- 
guages Modified 


The Council of the Faculty of Arts 
and Sciences has made several im- 
portant recommendations to the Uni- 
versity Senate, the general aim of 
all being a stiffening of the standard 
of work. In future, students will 
probably have to secure second class 
standing in four out of their eight 
senior courses, and second class stand- 
ing in A language courses. 

The Honours course has been 
raised from four to five years or 
Senior Matriculation and four years. 
Moreover, students entering the sec- 
ond year with Grade XII, but with 
no languages, shall be required to 
spend four years at the University in 
order to obtain a degree. 

The recommendations, in full, of 
the Council of the Faculty of Arts 
and Sciences to the University Sen- 
ate are as follows: 

(1) That, with a view to the stif- 
fening of the standard of work, four 
out of the necessary eight Senior 
couses, be passed with a mark of not 
less than 65 per cent. 

(2) That admission to Honours 
courses be raised from Junior to Sen- 
ior Matriculation or First Year Arts, 
this regulation to be noted as com- 
ing into effect in the autumn of 1926. 

That the passing mark for the A 
languages courses (including Greek 
1-3) be raised to 65 per cent. 

Owing to the fact that many stu- 
dents with Grade XII, but having no 
languages, enter the University in 


the second year, they have four 
courses to do in addition to 
the ordinary requirements for the 


Bachelor’s degree. This situation has 
caused a good deal of difficulty in 
the past. Should a failure occur in 
one of these courses, a fourth year 
student may find himself with a first 
year course on his hands. In order 
to eliminate any inequalties and em- 
barrassment arising from this cause, 
the Council of the Facuity of Arts 
and Sciences has recommertded to 
the Senate the adoption cf the fol- 
lowing provisions: 

1. That students entering the sec- 
ond year with Grade XII but with 
no languages, shall be required 
to spend four years at the Uni- 
versity in order to obtain a de- 
gree, that is, their first two 
years at the University must be 
spent in doing first and second 
year only. . 

2. That students who enter with 
Grade XII, but deficient in one 
language, shall not be allowed 
‘to enter the third year with an 
A language course unpassed. 

3. That students who enter with 
Grade XII but with deficiencies 
, or conditions, shall not be allow- 
ed to-enter the second year with 


ean emeeneemmneerenecemmneneceereeee erp TT ae Na a 


WOMEN’S ATHLETIC ASSOCIA. 
TION. 


President—-Dorothy MeNicholl. 
Vice-Pres.— Margaret Cooper. 
Secretary——Jean Folkins. 

Pres. Hockey-—-To be appointed. 
Pres. Basketball—To be appointed. 
ist Year Rep.—To be elected. 


WAUNEITA SOCIETY 
President-——-Bertha McCallum. 
Vice-Pres.-Maude Walsh. 
Secretary—Betty Lynch-Staunton. 


Year Representatives—To be elected. | 


WAUNEITA COUNCIL 
To be appointed. 


LITERARY ASSOCIATION 
President—Clarence Campbell, 
Vice-Pres.—-To be appointed. 
Secretary—-Helen McQueen. 
Senior Rep.—To be appointed. 
Junior Rep.—To be appointed. 
Pres. Debating—Don Ramsay . 
Pres. Dramatics—Bob Langston. 
Pres. Glee Club-~Mel Gale. 
Pres. Orchestra—To be elected. 


DEBATING SOCIETY 
President—Don Ramsay. 
Vice-Pres.—Marilda Clermont. 
Recording Secretary—Harold Phil- 

ips. 
Corresponding Secretary—Max Wer- 
shof. 


DRAMATIC SOCIETY 
President—Bob Langston. 
Vice-Pres.—-Grace Atkinson. 
Secretary—Sada Kiteley. 
Treasurer—~Roland Clarke. 


ORCHESTRA 
Executive to be elected. 


_ GLEE CLUB 
President—Mel Gale. . 
Sec.-Treas—Frank Newson. 
Executivc —Johnny McGregor. 
Hxecutive—J, Anderson. 


STUDENTS’ COURT 
Chief Justice—John Gaunt. 
Sheriff—-Walter Salnes. 
Puisne Judges—To be appointed. 
Prosecutor and Clerk——To be appoint- 
ed. 


MEN’S HOUSE COMMITTEE 
Chairman—-Bruce Macdonald. 
Bill Mueller. 

Aubs. McMillan. 
Walter Herbert. 


WOMEN’S HOUSE COMMITTEE 
Chairman—Louise Pattersan. 
Helen Manning. 

Margaret Cooper. 
Winnie Moyle. 


AG CLUB 


, President—Charlie Asplund. 


Vice-Pres.—-Jim Manson. 
Sec.-Treas.——Bill Harper. 

4th Year Rep.—W. J. Thomson, 
3rd Year Rep.—Jack Hunter. 
2nd Year Rep.—H. A. McGregor. 


ARTS CLUB 
President—-Morty Watts. 
Vice-Pres.—Grace Atkinson. 
Sec.-Treas.—Wes Oke. 
4th Year Rep.—Fred Irwin. 
3rd Year Rep.—Frances Shillington. 
2nd Year Rep.—Bill Hobbs. 
lst Year Rep.—To be appointed. 
Press Rep.—-Don MacKenzie. 


COMMERCE CLUB 
President—Ross Henderson. 
Vice-Pres.—Margaret Cooper. 
Sec.-Treas.—Ian Macdonald. 
2nd Year Rep.—Don Lundy. 
Press Rep.—Stan Barker. 


ENGINEERING STUDENTS’ 
SOCIETY 

President—Harold Ferguson. 
Vice-Pres.—Jack Bocock. 
Sec.-Treas.—Frank Patterson. 
5th Year Rep.—Keith Muir. 

4th Year Rep.—-To be elected. 
3rd Year Rep.—Nick Melnyk. 
2nd Year Rep.—Bill Attewell. 
Press Rep.—Frank Kunst. 


LAW CLUB 
President--Bruce Macdonald. 
Vice-Pres.——Bill_ Cromarty. 
Secretary—-Mildred Hamon. 
Treasurer—Kenneth Jamieson. 


PHARMACY CLUB 
President-—-Bert Groves. 
Vice-Pres.—Jean Auger. 
Sec.-Treas.—A. E. Gerhart. 
Athletics—Viv Leech. 


MED CLUB 
President~-Tom Michie. 
Vice-Pres.--George Haworth. 
Secretary—Barney Malo. 
Treasurer-—Len Cockle. 
6th Year Rep.—Beth Caswell. 
5th Year Rep.—P. H. Sprague. 
4th Year Rep.—H. Begg. . 
3rd Year Rep.-—-A. J. Wright. 
2nd Year Rep.—-A. E. Dunn. 


All Class executives to be elected in 
Fall. 


PRESS CLUB 
President-—Geoffrey Hewelcke. 
Vice-Pres.—Ernie Wilson. 
Sec.-Treas.— Wes Oke. 
Executive—-Dorothy Hartshorn. 
Executive—Rache Dickson. 


LE CERCLE FRANCAIS 
President-—-Professor Pelluet. 
Vice-Pres.—Gwen Toby. _ 
Secretary—Gwen Little. 
Treasurer-—-Shirley Macdonald. 


CHEMICAL SOCIETY 
Executive to be elected in Fall. 


BOTANICAL SOCIETY 
To be elected. 


MINING AND GEOLOGICAL 
SOCIETY 


a matriculation condition or de- |! President—-G. Knighton. 


ficiency. 


Secretary--To be elected. 


THE GATEWAY 


SITES PROPOSED 
FOR COVERED RINK 


Covered Rink Committee Also 
Suggest Plans For Raising 
Money 


The covered rink committee held 
their first meeting at Dr. Tory’s re- 
sidence, and diseussed where the rink 
should be placed on the University 
plans, and ways and means of raising 
the necessary funds with which to 
construct the building. 

The meeting appointed a commit- 
tee to report on a suitable location 
for the proposed rink. Two locations 
were discussed, one of which lies at 
the rear of the Residences, and the 
other, which was most favored, at 
the juncture of 112th Street and 87th 
Avenue. 

A finance committee, consisting of 
Dr. Hardy, Perey Davies and Mr. 
West, was appointed to investigate 
different methods by which the neces- 
sary money could be raised. It was 
suggested that the committees in con- 
trol of the major dances for next 
year should include an item of ex- 
penditure in their estimates, which 
sum should go to the covered rink 
fund; and that the surpluses of the 
senior year, and the House Commit- 
tee, and the revenue derived from 
the forthcoming Oxford debate, might 
be diverted towards helping the rink 
along. This last item, that of the 
money secured. from the debate, 
would amount to a considerable sum, 
next year, as it is proposed that the 
debate would be put on in Calgary as 
well as in Edmonton. 

-Communications with donations 
were received from the Freshman 
Class, the Med Club, the Senior Class 
and the Science Club, and these or- 
ganizations expressed themselves very 
strongly in favor of a covered rink, 
and will do everything in their power 
to further the project. 

From the interest that has been 
already shown by the student body as 
a whole, and the special cnéiuusiasm 
on the part of many of the student 
organizations so early in the cam- 
paign, the covered rink committee is 
very optimistic regarding the prospect 
of having a covered rink on’ the Uni- 
versity Campus by 1927 which will 
be a credit and a real asset to the 
University. 


ADAMS APPOINTED 
A CENTRAL CHECK 


Council Makes Grant to Track 
Club—Handbook to Be 
Published 


The appointment of a man to fill 
the position of Centrah Check for 
next year was one of the important 
matters of business attended to by 
the new Students’ Council this spring. 
A committee of the Council adver- 
tised the position and received seven 
applications from students in six dif- 
ferent faculties. This committee con- 
sidered the applications carefully, 
and recommended to the Council that 
Mr. Rod Adams be appointed to the 
post. The Council accepted the re- 
port of the committee, and Mr. 
Adams was duly appointed. 

In the discussion of the various 
applicants, the committee was largely 
guided by the suggestions made in 
the report of Mr. Cormack, whose 
term of office as Central Check has 
just expired. The amount of time 
whieh the student's course would per- 
mit-him to devote to the position was 
the first consideration, for experi- 
ence of the past year has shown that 
the office requires constant and 
systematic attention. The second 
consideration was the applicant’s ac- 
quaintance with student affairs at 
the University. As the Central 
Check has to deal with every branch 
of the Students’ Union, it was felt 
that this was a most important fac- 
tor. Book-keeping experience and 
salary were all in turn considered. 
After a long session, the committee 
finally decided that Mr. Adams was 
the best qualified to fill the office. 
The salary decided upon was the same 
as in the past year. 

Athletic Grants Made 

In view of the fact that the rugby 
and track seasons will be started 
very early next fall, the President 
of the Men’s Athletic Association 
made an application to the Council at 
its last meeting for advance guar- 
antees to cover initial expenses. The 
Rugby Club was provided with a suf- 
ficient guarantee to purchase equip- 
ment for the opening of the season, 
and the Track Club was guaranteed 
its expenses for a trip to Manitoba, 
where the next inter-varsity meet is 
to be held on October 17th. 

The subject of a U. of A. Hand- 
book was also discussed, and # com- 
mittee appointed to look into it dur- 
ing the summer. It wag decided to 
publish a small handbook containing 
the students constitution, Varsity yell 
and songs, general information about 
the University, and blank diary 
pages. Mr. Jack Marshall was ap- 
pointed to look into the matter of 
song and yell organization, in con- 
junction with the Rooters’ Club. 


GRADUATES GET GLIMPSE 
; OF THE FUTURE 


(Continued from Page 1} 


greatness of their Alma Mater, with 
the spirit of the Green and.Gold, for 
in such wise will their University 
grow in power and influence through- 
out the land. 

Then,-to our advice, let us add a 
word of encouragement. The way 
will not be easy nor the burden light. 
Mistakes in diagnosis, disappoint- 
ments. in results,  misunderstandings 
with fellow-practitioners, _ criticisms 
by the laiety, and unpaid . accounts 
will all led their quota of discour- 
agement, at times amounting almost 
to despair. A night's refreshin 
sleep, an occasional dimensiona 


PLANS FOR SUMMER 
SESSION COMPLETE 


Session Opens July 6 and Closes 
August 15——-Courses Given 
Under Arts Faculty 


The University Summer Session 
offers an attractive opportunity for 
Undergraduates to clear up past de- 
ficiencies and for teachers to improve 
their educational equipment. The 
1925 session opens Monday, July 6, 
and closes Saturday, August 15. The 
School is under th esupervision of the 
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and 
the tuition is givem along precisely 
the same lines as during the regular 
University session. Of course, the 
shortness of the term makes intensive 
study a necessity, but the pleasant 
weather enables students to secure 
adequate out-door recreation during 
their stay here. 

The Provincial Summer Schoo! for 
Teachers meets concurrently with the 
University Summer School. Not only 
does this widen the scope of available 
courses to include Matriculation and 
teachers’ frofessional training, but it 
tremely enjoyable one. Tennis,~soc- 
makes the combined session an ex- 
cer, base-ball, golf, basketball, bowl- 
ing, swimming, hiking, and dancing 
all add to the enjoyment of the six- 
weeks’ term. 

Because of the large attendance at 
the combined schools, rooms in the 
residences are at a premium, and 
those who are considering enrolling 
should lose no time in anvlying for 
particulars to Mr. C .E. Race, the 
Registrar of the University. 

The following courses, leading to 
the degrees of B.A., B.Se., in Arts, 
M.A., etc., will be given at the 1925 
sessiom: ‘ 

Chemistry 1; English 2; French 
1-3, 5-4; Greek 1-3; History 2 or 
58; Latin 1 and 3; Mathematics 1, 
7 (Pt. IT), 538, 62, 110; Physics I; 
Psychology 51 (Pt. IT), 55 (Pt. 1), 
104 (Pt. 1), 105 (Pt. IL). 

The authorities will endeavor to 
supply any additional course in which 
the enrollment exceeds five. : 


TWO SCHOLARSHIP 
AWARDS FOR 1295 
L0.D.E. and Rhodes Scholarships 


Will Be Open to Alberta 
Candidates 


Two important scholarships will be 
open for competition among Alberta 
students next term—the Rhodes 
Scholarship and the I.0.D.E. Scholar- 
ship. Both of these are very attrac- 
tive and though it is still early, there 
are rumors of several possible com- 
petitors for each award. The 1.0.D.E. 
scholarship, amounting to $1,400, en- 
titles the holder to one year’s study 
in any University of Great Britain, 
on stipulated subjects. The Rhodes 
Scholarship awards the successful 


candidate £350 a year and entitles 
him to 3 years attendance at Oxford. 

The Rhodes Scholarship was given 
by Cecil Rhodes for the first time in 
1903, for the purpose of bringing 
together men from all parts of the 
English-speaking world for the ad- 
vancement of higher learning, and for 
the decreasing of tendencies towards 
sectionalism. These men, it was in- 
tended, should be men of all-round 
ability, but it is definitely laid down 
that no quality of qualities in a can- 
didate shall compensate for lack of 
scholarship. Persons eligible for can- 
didature are all men who before the 
Ist of October, 1926, have reached 
their nineteenth, but not passed their 
twenty-fifth birthday and who have 
completed their Sophomore year. The 
man receiving this scholarship is in- 
deed fortunate, since he not only has 
opportunities for travel on the conti- 
nent, but is enabled to receive a lib- 
eral education which fits him for the 
pursuit of any type of academic or 
business life. Application blanks for 
the Rhodes’ Scholarship may be ob- 
tained from Mr. D. S. McKenzie, of 
the Department of Correspondence 
Courses, Arts Building, University of 
Alberta. 

The I. O. D. E. Scholarship of 
$1,400 for one year in any Univer- 
sity of Great Britain, was established 
at the termination of the war, for the 
study of British politics and British 
ideals of government. Those eligi- 
ble are men and women who on the 
1st fo October, 1926, have not pas- 
sed their twenty-seventh birthday, 


and who as British subjects, have had |}, 


at least five years’ domicile in Can- 
ada. To correct an erroneous im- 
pression that has’ gone abroad con- 
cerning this scholarship, attention is 
called to the following condition, viz.: 
that no preference is to be given to 
returned men or their relatives ex- 
cept in the case of two candidates 
being of equal merit, when prefer- 
ence would be given to a returned 
man or to his relative. Application 
forms for the I. O. D. E. Scholar- 
ship may be obtained from the Regias- 
trar of the University. 

The I. O. D. E. Scholarship is only 
given every other year. An award 
will be made to Alberta candidates 
next year. 


cheque, a cheery smile from the sweet 
companion, will bring fresh energy 
and new. determination to bear upon 
the crisis. 

So wonderfully human, so majesti- 
cally altruistic is our daily task thet 
naught else matters, Let our young 
hopefuls take heed of. the fine tra- 
ditions that. they would perpetuate 
in the annals of Medicine. Let them 
know and understand the responsibili- 
ties that await them in this momen- 
tous hour, and we will bestow upon 
them with their parchment and their 
hood,. a mountaineer's philosophy 
that rises far above the sordid plains 
of gold and dross to the highest and 
noblest peaks of humanity. 


FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1925, 


GATEWAY “A” GIVEN 
FOR FIRST TIME 
Has Distinctive Design — Six 


Awards, Four Retroactive, 
Made This Year 


In accordance with a recent a 
ment te the Undergraduates’ Publ 
cations Act, the Gateway has been 
given the privilege of awarding each 
year two “A” pins to members of 
the staff who have performed digs. 
tinguished literary services for the 
Gateway. _In accordance with the 
Act, the first awards, made this 
spring, were retroactive and six 
Gateway workers, including four ex. 
editors, received the Gateway “a” 
The recipients were as follows: For 
1922, Wilfrid Wees; for 1923, Mark 
Levey; for 1923-24, Bruce Macedon. 
ald, Wesley Watts; for 1924-95 
Geoffrey Hewelcke, Kenneth McKen. 

e. 

Though retroactive, the awar 
were limited to those at present tate 
ing lectures at the University. After 
taking all circumstances into account, 
the committee on awards, found such 
a basis necessary, though it excluded 
many past workers whose services to 
the Gateway have been of an out- 
standing nature. 

The new Gateway decoration is of 
a most attractive and distinctive pat- 
tern. The “A”, worked in 14k. gold 
is In seript_ with a neatly worked 
quill, symbolfé of the scribe, inclin. 
ing through it. Since only two awards 
may be given each year, a high stand. 
ard has been set, and keen compe- 
tition among Gateway staff and work. 
ers of the future is expected for this 
mark of merit, . 

The awarding of the University let. 
ter to its journalists is a new but 
welcome departure in the field of 
University journalism. In the debat- 
ing and drainatic societies, it hag 
long been the custom to award an 
A” pin to those members who have 
rendered faithful and distinguished 
service to their university. The feel. 
ing has also been that this type of 
award shquld be extended to Gateway 
workers. With this idea in view, 
the Students’ Council last fall passed 
the following amendment to the 
Undergraduates’ Publication Act: 

“Section 5 

“1. The Gateway may award on be. 
half of the Students’ Union, a decor. 
ation to take the form of a distinc. 
tive “A” pin, in recognition of the 
distinguished literary service of mem- 
bers of the staff of any undergradu- 
ate publication other than the Year 
Book. 

“2. A committee, to consist of the 
President of the Students’ Union, 
President. of the Literary Association, 
the retiring Editor-in-Chief of the 
Gateway and the present Editor-in- 
Chief of the Gateway, shall be a com- 
mittee empowered to recommend the 
awarding of these decorations on 
or before the first of March of each 
year hereafter. 

“3. Provided that not more than 
two such decorations may be award- 
ed in any one year and that no stu- 
dent shall be awarded more than one 
decoration.” . 

Of those who have received decor- 
ations this year, all are well-known 
to the student-body, though — their 
work on the Gateway itself may not 
be ‘So well known. Under Mr. Wees, 
Editor-in-Chief during 1922, the 
Gateway not only assumed a more at- 
tractive form, but appeared more 
regularly. _ With a more efficient 
administration, it assumed a very im- 
portant place among student  insti- 
tutions. At the same time, the Gate- 
way was put on a sounder basis fi- 
nancially, Mr. Levey, who succeeded 
as Editor-in-Chief for the first part 
of 1923, continued the good work. 
Furthermore, in his regime, he freed 
the Gateway from a burden of debt 
whichtit had carried for some time. 
John Cassels was Mr, Levey’s illus- 
trious successor. . 

Bruce Macdonald’s term for 1924; 
was marked by a steady improvement 
m every section of the paper, Far 
reaching and beneficial changes were 
made in the Undergraduates’ Publi- 
cation Act. Thee changes have re-~ 
sulted in a marked improvement in. 
business administration. Mr, Watts, 
the present Editor-in-Chief,  intro- 
duced the Literary Supplement with 
marked success, while the whole or- 
ganization of the paper has been 
operating smoothly under his jurisdic- 
ion, 

Geoff. Hewelcke, both famed and | 
defamed through his sharp cracks in 


Casserole, well-known as the persist- 
ent Editor of the Literary Supple- . 
ment, and new president of the Press ! 


Club, has been a most energetic and : 
thoraugh-going journalist. is: ‘work : 
as been outstanding and most worthy ; 
of the Gateway award for 1924-25. | 
Kenneth McKenzie, who will receive | 
the second award for the past year 
is Associate-Editor of the Gateway . 
and the Literary Supplement. He is | 
known not only as a brilliant writer 
but a tireless worker whose efforts 
have added greatly to the attractive: 
ness of the news page. 


ARTS PLAN OUTING 


i 
i 
: 
Plans are already under way fot | 
another big Arts Club hike to White 
Mud Creek early next fall, The * 
outing will be open to members of | 
all faculties and will be. especially 
used to introduce the Freshmen into 
University life. Although. the pro 
posed date falls within the first week 
of lectures, and. therefore of Fresh- | 
man supervision, all regulations will | 
be suspended for the occasion. ; 

An exceptionally enjoyable  pro- | 
gram is being drawn up for the even- 
ing and the entire student body will 
be given an opportunity to start the 
new term right. : 


The registration at the University | 
of Alberta for the session 1924-25 | 
was over 1350. This number includes © 
partial as well as full-time atudents. / 

Over 800 students paid full Stu- 
dents’ Union Fees. 


Rogers; Baker and Misg M. Bell and Car» te 8 ; ? : 
aceGUNTAMeY 4 liste and ities Beane and we Deane and as correct as it is possible to make them in the limited time af-) G01. pint tS iF ae CCOUNTANCY ' 
7 Class tt:  ittics owen iy Gltten; Mise, Fel Mine Maclennan and Miss McLean and Miss forded since enumerations, and are subject to Faculty rulings in un ectals Hane, ary otieaget” if Class 1: : Grov : 
F lam » € s c m + Khe g . i - 
j equal; MeBwen, and Potter, equal: Bos: |and Mies Roberts and ‘Tinkham, equal. particular ca cases and to ratification by the Senate. Scott, Hy, eu W. Arand Rogers, He end! Glass Tf: Gerhart; Madden; Leech; 


f mana; MeAra; 
and Adams, equal; Kelly. 


f Olase III: Harris. 
. Henderson; Beach; McLaren; Mi Bain I : i * a “ 
wonfaaon:, Reach Mebaren: aie Bale: | Cie AU, Mign xBvenas Mien Datglioh;| . OM* ON UGREEK 101 Saal, Bott. Mis, and Sharman “apd | arctiole) Wand Gare. 2 county Berge BIOCHEMISTRY 2 
ea HITT Mise Cooper and Shulman Class 1: Mrs; McConkey: Mrs. Walton} O** 1: Manson, Mine 5 Misa C, sae.” “Ms eal PHYSICS Z Las. rie aT; Monsgten. 
/ 2 asa 1: re. onkey ; Ts. alton : 1 . - 
equal: MacDonald; Sprung; Stephens; Bar- and paises Haw and Miss Smith ard Miss Glass 1 oes pes 1 Mi Weinlas GE and Klinch, W. on tae oe if Fp McPherson, J. A ers, ase pecker, ©. M., and Met, 
; erlock, equal. as Il; Deeprose. ‘ , . * * , 
Clase 1 ANCIENT HISTORY 51 Class Ii; Forshaw; Miss. Forester; Miss | Class U1: Trattry Stewart, Sunt. tieonee ie wee Miss H. / Runge, G., equal; Beott, H.; Caspar, J. and | Mitchell; Nixon: Boyce and Holmes, 
ciate Te lee MAT. isn Buckley: Wat- Giffin; | Miss Bullard: Mise, Martin: Mise | uses IIT: HEBREW 84 en eettt, tl; Caspar, J-: Borden, Mise Flor- Cornwall 3. Dv: pale eat Titan, B. | equal; Caldwell and Syska, equal. 
F eon: | Bullock: Weinlos; Miss Moorhouse:| “‘Ciass Ill: Edwards: 'Miss.H. Bell; Misa * ““HISTORY 1 Claes Ill: Moyle, Mice We and Walsh, |ouual: Gelssenger, M. E.. and Syrotuck, BOTANY 3 
irby. ARCHITECTURE 62 Thomson; Ainlay; Watson; Bullock and| Clags 1: Farmer, Miss; Watt, Miss:;| Miss M., acLennan, Miss E, and |Sdusl: Trowbridge, E. B.; Sweeney » I and Class I: Gerhart. 
| - Class IL: Miss Castor; Miss Stud- qhomp son, equal; | M ing Matthewe;/ Melee: Runge: Frickleton and Shearer, Miss: Shillingtsn, “Miva x equal; Parmelee, Miss Frit, B w. Seah rian A, and Fartier, Clasa IT: Grove 
} holmes Mise Knight: ‘Miss @. Studhoime, | {anreon: McDonald: Haight and Misr er [cage ir: 8 ; Saddington; vs and Robinson, ng cate Mion Ey and Scott, H. and Mitchell C.. 
Class, II, Mra. Parke; Revell; Kelly. Eubank an Richards and D. MacKenzie, | and “Treffry, caual; Halperin; Saul; Brame LATIN equal; Baardaeth, B., and Prickleton, Class TT: Madden; Halliday; Nix- 


| Miss Craig, equal; Hamilton; Klingman and 


f Lennan, equal; Tinkham and: Syrotuck, 
} equal; Edgar. 


! Wright; Hunter and Dean, equal; Brown; 
: Miss Evans: Pratt and Lefsrad, equal; Car- 
'jisle; Roxburgh; Russell, W.; Wright and 


on and Helmes and Chambers, equal. ENTOMOLOGY 81 . , . MATERIA MEDICA 51 vill ” lobbs, F., equal; Cutter 
7 ‘BOTANY 52 4 Class II: Miss, and “Tennyson, equal; MeDonald:| Class 11: Auger, Mise J. A. Somervil * cae a Fe gauell patter | ka. 
Class I: Huakins and Brown, equal. Clase Il; Wee. , ‘ ‘asa ITI; MeLennan, Misa A, J. J, equal; Major, an Mayne, equal LATIN 36 
Class II: Malloch; Martin and Bedford, | FRENCH 81 tase Te Bone TORY. 2. MATERIA MEDICA 52 HicDougall, Fe" Greham, Miss. E, ‘Class T: Gerhart; H Mi 
equal; Mann; Fieht and Clarke, equal:| Class I: Mise Little; Miss E. Clermont| Class I: atler, Mies, ‘and Morrison,| Class II: Goodall, Miss A. M. and Hardin, | Lundy, D., equal: MacDonald, Miss %. ang rhart; ieggen, Miss, 
Lebmarn, and Miss Toby, equal; Mins M. Clermont | equal: pian ing, and Borden, Miss, and|H., equal: Marshall, Miss A. Tames, Miss ae ‘and Fraser R., equal; Bo- | Groves. 
Class Ill: Larg and Missa Wiiliameon, equal. Craig, Mise C. and Newhouse, Miss, equal. Class II: Law, C.; Becker, Miss R. Hnger, Mise M., and Milnes, Mias L., equal; Class If: Goldbe d. Madd 
CHEMISTRY 1 Class TH: Misa Gimby; Miss McQueen; | _, Class R Gatley. iss; Hinks, Miss ; MATHEMATICS 1 Aylaworth, Miss H., and Hilliker, Mias KE. : an en, 
Class 1: .Refber; Gallay; Klingaman;| Miss Barclay. and Miss Silverthorn, equal; Peterson : a obingon, Miss: Bel Miss, and Class f: Richardson and Wershof, equat;|and Nix, Misa M., and Chauvin, Miss M., equal; Halliday; raser; Carlisle; 
Clark; Morrison. Villy; McDonald, 3.; Smith, Miss D.: Miss | LY Pith Holmes, h s, and Lefsrud and! mePherson and Saddington, equal. and Fraser, C., and Clark, J., and Craw- Porter; Bannvil @ and Steeves, al; 
Class Ti: Liesemer and Miss L. New-| Haw; Miss Atkinson and Ellis, equal: Har-| Nix, Miss, an Thras ee Mise. equal; Ru- Class Ii: Cornwall) and Miss Farmer, | ford, A., equal. Leech; Ranks: McN ill, Miss ol j 
howse, equal; Dean; Jewitt; McEwen and|rison and Miss Sorenson, equal. don, Miss:- Kelly and) McLennan, Miss, equal; Miss Watt; Miss Kellam; Geissinger; PHYSICS 38 ee eCNeL ver, 
Waldo, fava: Baker and Boyd and Lefsrud, neint® IK: | Flack: ‘Kiteley; | Miss Stud °ACfase Il: Dean; Carlson, Miss, and Dow. Revell ; Boyle and O'Toole ,equal; Frickle-{ Clase I: Harwood, R. B. Class III: “Curtis. 
equal; Conquest an ulver; Miss Jamieson }holme an feacock, equal; vans, Bs, y iq * * | ton; ss Bell; Mies Saul and Sweene 
and MeAra, equal; Froman; Missa Shearer} and Walker, equal. : ney and MacLennan, Miss E. 'N., equal: Tennyson and Trow ridge, equal: Misa ¥,tnd wee. Il: Capsey, ne Miss; Ainsworth, H.; ; MATERIA MEDICA 1 


| Miss Weir and Carlson and Misa Kellam 
| and MacKenzie, J. R., and W. Russell, 


| Miss Owens and Stuart, equal; Allin and 
. Goldberg and Nielsen and Miss Williame, 


Pratt, equal; Miss Borden; tye and W, 
Russell, equal: Cooper; Miss Thrasher and 
\R. J. Wright, equal; Gaflay and. Goldberg 
and Mise Hilliker and Mise Williams, equal ; 
Miss Miller and Miss Nichols and Miss 
Rudolph _and Watt, equal; Miss Reed; 


Students will be notified from the University Office regarding Mion, eaual; Frasgr B. Hy, and sins 
supplementals and other requirements of the Faculty Gouncils in| Azsvorti, Mus -: Brager, J. "Band 


their particular cases. The classified results in various courses are Ee Bouneer Bigs “Wand” Camresa, As | OF P HARMACY oe 


‘FACULTY OF ARTS - 
AND SCIENCES 


schinsky and “ynd Young, Mise D., aud Van 
Buren, equals by Lynch-Staunton, Miss E., and 
McBain, . equal; Bury and Cameron 
and Crawford vad McAra and Morrtson, 


val, 
Pies eins Hobbs, Fi Ons Casper, J i. and Frle- Olver: a Mi 
@AG, og RD ervine, ,OQUR perin ass 2 mn, a8, and Tra- 
ee Brew oo quan an Tales’ g | set; Steeves; Mc Neill, Mise; Ranks; 
equal; Gre , E.;. Hobbs, As; Thorpe, A.; Curtis. 


ENGLISH 83 
Clase I: Miss Barclay. 
Olass Hi: Misa Kiteley; Miss Buckle 
Martland; Misa McAlpine; Hargrave; Smith: 
Mackenzie. 


Clase Ut: Kellam; Power; Miss Hessey 


GREEK 61 
Class 1: 


ACCOUNTANCY 52 Clans 1: Yeon, Mine. 


Class It: Miss Clermont; Mises Swinarton; 


Class I Caspar, J. and Newhouse, Miss s Ov H "Mi 
oe jar, N : . and aaeth, "M.. qual; Woodhull, |On; Oliver; Heggen, Miss; Carrigan 
E. “and Wetnlos, 3, L., equal; Stewart, Misa (Wiss G.; Barraud, Miss V., and Longton, and McNeill, equal; Ranks and Leech, 


. M,, de 
Class II: Klinck, W. R.; Coone, Mise W.;|H. caual: Wershof, Mand Progen Wo 38d | equal. 


BIOCHEMISTRY 61 
Claas II: Kutz; Tomlinson and Mather, 
equal; Miss Goodall; Migs Gratz; Miss Mar- 
shall; Cooper; Miss Bard. 


ner and Misa Diamond, equal; O'Toole; Miss 
Lynch-Staunton; Thomson; Archibald and 
Aylesworth, Miss, equal; Baardseth, Miss, 


equal. 


ENGLISH 60 
Class I: Miss Barclay and Misa Haw and 


; Sm equal. and Mayne and Woodhull, Miss,” equal:| Harris, J. E.; is } W., Wi 
Class HIT: Mclean) Lewes: Hardin, ae Jarereve; "Hat back: Miss Cornwell; Major and Mitchell and Pekarsky, Mins M. “ae Lee Miss W., and Walsh. Ewing, Mis» 8. and Archibald, W. 6. . CHEMISTRY 2 
ual. i » He uy acle an i 
Class I: Russell, L. 8. Prager: Mackenzie. McAlpine; Gish; Miss| Clase IIT: Scott; Chauvin, Mise: Cam- nd cxeon L.; MacLennan, | ““Cisss III: Thomson, Miss B., and Cram, | Class II: Gerhart and Groves, equal; 


Class IL: Conquest; Goldberg; Wilaon and eron; MePherson; Askin and Wershof?, 
equal; Boyle aid Bury and Dockerill, equal; 
MeLatchie, Mies, and Schiain, Miss, and 
Van Buren, equal; Broadbridge, Miss, and 
Burritt, Miss, and ‘Clark and Mahaffy, Miss 
equal; Hobbs and McKechnie, Miss, an 


Miss E.; Parmelee, Miss 4, Bell, Mise M.; E., and Lucas, J., and Blue, Miss M. 
olkK, 1 dy. 7 a8 equal; . 
Robinson, Miss L.; Shillington, Mise F . Tredway, Miss M., and Askin, %, and carseat ia eed Leech; H 
Hilliker, H., and Freeman, F., and Thorpe, + Taser; eggen, 


LATIN 52 
Glad: Manson, eet Way, Vii) 4, equal; MeLatehis, Miss U.. and Lyneb: Miss. 
a eintos, C. taunton,  @ 
Claes Il: Toby, Mise G.; Klinek, W. R. Hobbs ae Ww. E equals Lyse, Mise’ A. and CHEMISTRY 3 
Milne, Miss, equal; Brynildson and Dunn! Gigss 1: Way LATIN 108 White, 7 equal; “Mabatty, Lv oe rand Van Class I: Monaghan. 
and Lundy, equal; Thorpe; Craig, Miss, and , Clase Tl; Manson, Mise M.; Cato, Misa nildsen, R., and Buchanan, R., equal; Bran- Class II: Boyce: 


Dobson, Migs, and Lucas and Rogers, egual:| 5 ag a ace aad O'pGen He and || Class IIT: Mitchell; Carrigan; Sys- 


Keir; Riley. 
ENGLISH 62 
Class I: Jones; Miss Sherlock. 
Class Il: Hargrave; Misa Barclay; Miss 
McAlpine; Miss Sorenson; MacKenzie. 
lass Ill: Miss Williamaon; Misa Keir 


{aeg.). 
ENGLISH 
Class I: Mies Haw; Mine Smith. 


Jewitt and Clark, equal; Revell and Mc- 


Class [II: Claxton and Boyd, equal; 


Goodall and Miss Coone, equal; Malcolm- 


. NCH 58 
Clags 1: Misa E. Clermont. 

Class Il: Mise Toby; Miss Little and 
Miss Williamson, equal; Mise McQueen; 
Walters; McDonald; McClung; English and 
Mise Matthews, equal. 

Clasa HI: Hartshorn; Shulman and D. W. 
Macdonald, equal; Barker; Stephens and 
Johnston, ‘equal. 


NCH A 

Clase I:. Hango; Flan, Mias; Bell, Miss; 
Field; Misa P: rkman. 

Class II: Harwood and Miss Pfefferle, 
equal; Miss Tredway and Shemeluk, equal; 
Miss Aylesworth and Galbraith, equal 
Lakusta and Saddington, equal; McMillan, 
Miss: McPherson; Osburn; Lynch-Staunton, 
Miss; . Miss Elmore and’ Miss Woodhull, 


Nichola | Miss, and Wood, Mies, ‘equal; 
iler,; Miss; MacNab, Misa and Mc- 
Callum, Misa,..and Walsh, Miss, equal;|w 
Creighton, Miss. 

HISTORY 3 

Clase I: Stuart. 

Class II: Hinke, Miss; Adam, Miss; Dick- 
son; Matheson; Begg: French; Rudolph 
Miss; Nichols, Miss; Ewing, "Miss, an: 
Gasley, Miss, equal. 

Class IIT: Borie ed 


TORY 
Clasa I . Bulle Miss; Siverthorne, Miss. 
Clase Il: Edwards. 
Class TH: Morrison. 
HISTORY 86 
Class 11: Edwards. 
Class 11]; Oke; Auxier; Dalgleish, Mies; 


Class 1: Monaghan; Shipley; 
Holmes, 
Class If; Mitchell; Meters; Becker, 
M.; Syska and Nixon, equal; 
Boyce; Caldwell. 
Class III: Carrigan. 
PHARMACY 1. 
Class I: Monaghan. 
Class II; Holmes and Shipley, € 
al; Meters; Mitchell; Becker, C. ot. 
‘Class. IIT’: Nixon; Boyce; Caldwell; 
Syska; Carrigan, _. . 
PHARMACY 2 


ing; Mrs. Baardseth and McGregor, equal. Class III: Jagoe, 0. 

Class WI: Mies Chauvin and Fraser, R. PHYSICS 3 LAB. 

Mand J. H. Fraser and Hobbs, equal:! Ctugs I: Ainsworth, H.; Harwood, R. 
eDougall; Miss Burritt; Cameron and Clase Il: Weir, V.: Capsey, E. Miss; 
Lucas, equal; Adams and Misa Lehmann, Jagoe, O. Misa; Stecle, W oo ‘ 
equal; Miss Bolinger and Hilliker and Miss eee IIT: Christensen, C. W. 

Lines, equal; Mies Bees, and Gram and PHYSICS 6 

eterson, equal; Archibald a 

Buchanan and Clark and, Dunn and Hobbs Class 1: Woodford, R.; Morrison, J. Gal- 


and Mise Tredway, equal: Friefield braith, A. 

Miss E. Graham, equal; Caspar and Hawre- Ciass II: Reiber, Hs Froman ; Agkinson, 
liak and Longton and Tinkham and Stro-| Mise G.; Sutherland, J. Mawdsley, 

han, equal; Miss Connors and Lopuchinsky |,, Class, III: Watt, §: Brewer, ‘B.; Mac- 
and Lundy and Nykiforuk, equal; Dickson | Nab, Miss 

and Méadows and Parker and Miss Wood- . PHYSICS 6, PRACTICAL 

hull, equal: Miss Aylesworth and Miss Mc-|_ Class 1: Woodford, B.; Reiher H.; Gal- 
Latchie and MacLachlan and Mitchell, {| braith, 

equal; Fuog and Miss Folkins and Gardiner| Class ai Mawdsley, R.; Froman, D.; At- 


and Willis, equal; Hamilton and McLennan, 
equal; Brown, C., and Carlisle, equal; Bar- 
nett and Bosimans and Crang and Edwards 
and Watt and R. Wright, equal; Pratt and 


equal. 

Class Ti: Adams and Miss Lobb and 8. G. 
MacDonald and K. K. Wright, equal; Cham- 
bers and Misa Connora and Miss Holmes, 
equal; Auxier and McDonald, I, and Miss 
McNichol, equal; Macaulay and Miss Mac- 
Millan, equal; Miss Bossenberry. and Em- 
mett and Mias Hartshorn and Potter and 
Miss Whiteside, equal; Miss Miller and 


equal; “Miss L. Coone and Miss Deane, 


equal; Mias Hessey and Miss Pfefferle,jequal; Watt and Miss Williams, equal; Robinson, “Misa. and Major equal. Aegrotat: Misa Cutter; in, Mise G, and Watt, BR. and Morri- 

, qual: Downey; Miss Beery. and Miss D. Frebber and pProule, equal: parry i Conhors. Clase a Rei (Supplemental) Misa Shillington. “ere ee ers son, J. ” gmuals ” Brewer, E ite orae, 7 ¥' Class I: Mona ghan. 

’ Craig, equal; Sharman an inkham, equal; a8, an arker, equal; Cameron; ie- MATHEMATICS 3 : utherland, J.; Young, C. M.; MacKenzie, D. 

Miss Blue and Miss Coroneille and Misa| field and Kemp and E. L. Smith and Miss HIS’ Class I: Mias Jagoe; Misa Diamond. Class Ifl: MacNab, Miss I. Class IT: Mitchell; Holmes; Ship- 


} Dobson and, Misa Osborne and Petergen and 


Foline apa qvosiy and axe, caval: Mis |Memboung, Mine bottles Culver: Qaper![meBeath, Mine; Skene, io. seroaedsgertes hd Mint “Paterson ad (iets ogutl eid Ginna Mis no | °™ 2 
q foo” ecual Mian Eubank and’ Miss Moor. Qreighton god Bain, Migs, gy Peat ene ALBERT La EGE h, 1. ,MATHEMATICS 62 Thorpe, equal. , , EDUCATION 54 
ine equal. Mise Castor and Malcolmaon, | and Barnett, equal; ‘A Bernard, Liesemer and Class I: Montgomery, Miss “Giese Il: Scott: Mise A A. M. Smith. POLITICAL ECONOMY 10 Clase TL: McAllister. 
. ‘tae — ing Canto otic | Willis, equal; Kellam: Dickson and McEwen Class Il: Dougiaa; Marion; Mather; White. tl in: Class 1: Willi EDUTATION 85 
Reed, mith : tty a and | Fregeh an <; equal; Swain, Migs, and Capsey, Misa, equal;|,, Claes UI: Duncan, Miss, and Tarnow, nas my ae iem ATICS 101 - Clang IT: Giffen; Culver; Robertson, Misa:] ojaye 4: Lagerte 
wed, fUiblae ana Mig 8 83 sai isan. aed i}Grang and Miss Edwards and’ Miss’ Miller. Mise, ols, Webber; Hind, nitise and Clase I: Mies Jagoe Bain, Miss, and Power, equal; Davies and ENC 82 
’ elnyx, equal; axter an waning, equi . * * cAra, €q GLISH 
Miss J. McCallum, cata: Lyle; MacGregor and Iversen, equal. Miss; Lyle: MeLennan | Carlyle, Miss; Knechtel and MacDonald and} (, 1, MATHEMATICS 103 Class IIT: McEwen and Nieleen, equal:} Class 1: Miss Shaver. 
and Mis Robinson Weede Philp end Miss {snd Coone, Miss L,, and Bell, Mies, equal; | Norris, Miss, and Slutker, eq MATHEMATICS 103, First Half felfery: or Weaning Mies, rage Sours: : CHEMISTRY 101 
Roberts, equal; Banks and * Hinchey equal; } Glass; Fanning, Miss; Brown; Macauley and LATIN A Class I: Mra. Taylor; Young. MacDor ah e. ‘ , "| Class I: Malloch, 
Miss Prevey (aeg.) , Walsh, Miss, and Jeffery, equal; bathers] 4, Claes 1: Miss Butler; Reiber; Miss Jagoe; PHARMACY 61 acDonal Clase II: Martin; Brown; Ward. 
- ana EE Robertson, Miss; Bole erts, Miss, and Jamie-| Mise Kellam; Miss Saul; Brown, H. K. and) Giggs LIT: Mise Auger. - POLITICAL, ECONOMY 63 : 
COMMERCIAL LAW Giffen; | ¥en and Rogers and Downey, équel; Nichols, |Harrison and Shlain, Miss, equal. PHARMACY 82 Ciaga, 1: Saucier; Newson; “Campbell; CHEMISTRY 102. ; 
Clase It: Mise Manping ; Bissett; ton ; Miss; Craig, D.; Gatley, Miso and Burke,{  Clasa Il: Saddington; Miss Whiteside:) Gjess Ill; Mise Auger. Antrobus and Bryan, equal; Cobb, Miss, and| Clase I1;. Mather. : ; 
isa Clermont; Miss Paterson and Step en: | equal. Geissinger: Power; Miss Pfefferle; Trow- HARMACY 84 Smith, Mra. ea MATHEMATICS 6i 
gaia Henderson;"Davies and Glass, equal; FRENCH TEACHERS bridge; Frickleton; Mrs. Baardseth and! ois, 1: Misa Aug Clase IT: orBrien: Boyle, Miss; Gaunt and Class it: ¥ F, ; 
San Cooper and Miss Robergson and Mise Class If: Moher, Misa; Hentay, Mise;| Mise Tredway, equal + Miss McNeil; Miss PHARMACY 88 Jamieson and Mahaffy and Milvain, gavel eae oute, a. . 
winarton, equal: Cox and Sprung, equi Kruger, Mis McLatchie; Miss McCallum; Miss ‘Tames Class If: Mins Goodall and Mise Mar- | Martiand: Butchart and McDonald, 0. MATHEMATICS ¢2 


| ee ‘analy: 9 a eae fa aad | Gans MTs Wolalon, 0s Abe Rarbeek 


ley: Boyce. 


Class TIT; Carrigan; Becker, C.M.;- 
Meters; Syska; Nixon. 


TORY 88 
Class 1: Gimby, Misa; Cobb, Mise, and 
Martland and Frame, equal. 
Class II: Sorenson, piss: Buckley, Miss, 
and Henderson and Mitchell, equal; Cro- 


Class II; Scott. PHYSICS 8 

Class Ili: Miss Thomson; Miss Williams Class I: Conquest; G. R.; Clark, R.. FP. 
and Mather and Runge, equal; Rowers; Miss Class Il: Stewart, Miss H. E.; Jewitt, W. 
Lynch-Staunton; Drinnan; Freeman; Somer- Class III: McKenzie; Brinnan, B. 


Stacey and Maloney, equal; Misa Whiteside 
and Tennyson, equal; Potter and I. W. 
Taylor, equal, 

Class III: Miss “Saul and Bosmans, equal; 


Revell and Miss Sherriffs and Miss Thrasher 
and Miss Hilliker, equal. 
CHEMISTRY $1 


Class I: Sturrock; Sutherland. Kocher; Miss MeLatchie and Miss Gra- marty and McDonald and Tavender and | ville; Cairney. » 
Claga It: Laws; Weinlos; Miss Marshall;|ham and Askin, equal: Seott: Fraser. ‘J. H.t| Watson, equal; Cairns and Matheson, equal: |” MATHEMATICS 7 Class PHYSICS 8, gh RACTICAL PHARMACY 4 
mee Goodall and Hardin, qual; FD John: Miss, avid and ©, MeDonald Satie td Brant ant MycDonala, qual: Gkicch. and| Gites t: Galbraith; Reiber. Clark, equal; Clase il: Clack R.; Drinnan R., and Jewitt,| Class I: Monaghan; Meters. : 
. 6 §fOn eller; 8 nde: nm; rwin an ual; t 188 6 > B ’ ’ 
j Johnaton, G. C., eq ual. me Miss Bolinger and Mitchell, equal; Miss J.] Edwards, equal; Bell and Dalgleish, Miss, Wright; Woodloras ane Mary ea ¥. spend Stewart, Miss H., equal; MeKensie, Clags II: Mitchell; Syska: Boyce 
Class Il: Mise” Scott: Brewer; Goodall;| McCallum and Smith, equal: Cook: Alns-{and Smith, equal; French; McRae and Stud-{ Class II: Harwood; Morrison; Jamieson, {7° P- and Holmes and Shipley, equal; Car- 
Revell; Walker. T MEMISTRY 82 worth and Lundy, and R. Neer and holme, Mins & fauals “Philp; Cross and Miss, and MecKensie, equal: Geter. Laverty : Clase I: Fr FHYSICS 12 rigan; Becker, C. M. 
airney, ¢qua: Oy: 2 ey O85, e0u t) ; ine’ n as: t oman. 
, Glass th Grate; McLaughlin and Miss|Dunn; Fuog; McDougall; Lehanky; Markle. Clase 1; Ct HISTORY 301, i berg, equines tHemat Ber and Go uci H: Revell; Watson, Miss: Fleming, Claes THT: Caldwell: Nhxon. 
mith, equal; MacLean; ewer. FRENCH 1—3 ss mb'y, iss; Co 88. MATHEMATICS 2t iss, an eir, 98, equal. . 
Clase UT: Miss Folkine and Mise Lobb,| Claes I: Galbraith; Pekarsky. na QUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 2s Claas I: Gallay; Laverty and Noble,| Clase III: Edmonds. Claas 1: Gechort (THEORY) 
equal; Thorpe: Mies Moyle; Miss Auger:| Glass II: Richardson; Farmer: Jewitt and Claas gses. Begg, Sherriffs, Osborne, | equal; Selnes. PHYSICS 12 LAB. : . 
Miss Redig; Miss Young; Miss Bell and| yopettand and Wylie and MeKowna, Miss,{ Deane and Dickson, equal; Miss Connors:/ Ciass III: Liesemer, Macauley; Mac-| Class I: Revell: Froman. Class II: Madden; . Halliday; 
} Large, equal. CHEMISTRY 88 and Frickleton; equal Walsh, Miss; Wers- MacMillan EHOLD ECONOMICS 3 Gregor. Class Il: Weir, Miss, and Edmunds, | Groves. ; 
: hoff; Sweeney; Goldberg and Mias Thomeon sg MATHEMATICS 22 equal; Fleming, Miss, and Watson, Miss, 
aes, Te Sutherland : Mise Goodall Stur- sand } Nielson and Miss MeCray, equal; Hobbs ite ee If: Misses McMillan; Connors; Sher- Class re Galbraith: Woodford. equal. Class III: Mitchell and Oliver, 
Toc ell an we an alker, equa t ; i 's; Deane. asa IL: Gallay; Miss Capsey. PHYSICS : : 
Class Il: Ellie and Miss Marshall, equal: en” enud wien, caval 5 Hortinon Miss Class III: Mise Osborne. Glass IIT: Miss Weir; Liesemer; Macaulay: Class If: Kelly, LC 58. equal; Fraser. . 
Mucller and Walters, equal Brearley Her-| Diamond and Miss Milne, equal; Auxier; HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 51 Burke. MATHEMATICS PHYSICS 54 PHYSICS 11 (LABORATORY 
Ini be er Ww im ch, ea@hl: | Miss Thrasher and Misa Parmelee and Peter-|_ Class I: Torgerson, Miss: Silverthorne, Ciass I: T A EMA 53 Class IT: Jagos, Miss E.; Rogers, K. Class 1: Gerhart. 
ari e; Watts. zon and Lewis and Hobbs and Watt, Miss, | Miss Hee oe beibues PHYSIOLOGY 51 Class II: G roves: Halliday and a 


Jagee? Walker: iia Misa Atkinson; Miss Class Ii: McKitrick, Mise. 
Clase UI: McNichol, Miss; Miss Fleming. PHYSIOLOGY 61 
MATHEMATICS 85 Clase It: Kute, B. L.; Kuts, W. M., and 
Class If: Galbraith: Miss Capsey; Antro- | Clarke, Miss, and Gratz, Miss, equal. 
bus; Walker; Woodford; Mueller; Miss| Class HI: Moyle, Miss. 


Class Il: Anderson, Miss; MeCallum, 
Miss; Boyle, Misa; McQueen, Miss; De 
Silva, Piss. 
OUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 82 
clase Ui: Clermont, ‘Miss; Stwdholme, 


Class HI: Maleolmson; Brown; Wilson, |, 
. qual; Bykiforuk and Harcourt, equal; 
Mixa; MacGregor Gosek Philp; Banks. equal; Dockeril and Pollock and Strohan, 


RY 89 
Class Ul: Misa Prevey; Bae Edgar and Banks and Cornwall and Tinkham and Pull- 


erton, equal, 
Miss Farnalis, equal; Miss McBeath and)" Gisss III: Major and Rogers, equal; Bar- 


Madden, equal. 

Class itt: Oliver; Fraser; Leech 
and Ranks, equal; Heggen, Miss; 
Steeves. : 


Miss Skene, equal; Miss Clarke; Mies Clut- Miss. 
ton. geud, Mise, and Archibald and Carlisle end |" Class TI: Castor, Miss, and Eubank, Miss, | Fleming. -_ POLITICAL, ECONOMY 1 ais 
clase T: SCHEMISTRY 101 os guther- | Bain and Smith and Miss Bishop and Miss | aval. Class III: Froman; Revell: Miss Jamfeson} Class 1; Relbers. Watt; Atkinson, Miss. TOXICOLOGY I 
fancies Ti Sturrock; Miss ecker; Suther-|gracey, equal; Miss Begg and Bury and HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 55 an se iM THEMATICS z, caus’ Mi lana Sh; Wilt 85 ua: ‘Mine: Adam, Class I: Monaghan; Meters and 
ue CHEMISTRY 102 Mise Reed and Cram snd Thompson, J.j Giese 1) Grete, Mine, m on Mek nd Kitely, Mise, eaual;| Mitchell, equal; 
. , equal: MeDonald. and O’Brien and Osburn;| lass hi: Moyle, Miss; Bard. J Miss. Class 11; Harg Miss; McEwen an te ¥ ng, equ chell, equ Holmes. 
Class If; Kutz. equal; Thompson, R:-K., and Miss Bossen- HOUSEHOLD. ECONOMICS, 56 MATHEMATICS 87 Williams, Miss, and Thrasher, Miss, and Class If-- Shipley; Becker, C.M:: 
tae Oe etes IN ENGLISH 81 berry, equal; Van Buren; Conquest; Brynild-| Class“: Frovey, Miss. M Cie i ees ee ere ee A Bertiower’ Mise; Goaner | B Ni Syska, , " 
, scn; Drinan; Dutil-and Wright, Re J. L.,|_, Class I: Clarke, Miss; Skene, Mins; Mc-| Class + Rute. EMATICS 61 and vat lo, equa rr on neon, oe eaee oyce; Nixon; Syska. 
(lass I: Mise Manson; Mise Kiteley.  |and Broadbridge and Miss C. James, equal; | Beath, Miss. : and Culver, equa owney, an : Class TH: Carrigan ; Caldwell. 
ass If:. Mise McAlpine; Miss Craig an Miss Holmes and Miss Lehmann, equal; HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 87 Class I: Martland; Mrs. Taylor. equal; Rogers and Begg, equal. 


Miss Matthews, equel; Miss Bell; Harris Laverty, Class It: Prevey, Miss; Skene, Miss: 


Class Hargrave: Flack; Giffen; Mise Class Ill: Petter; Newhouse, Miss, and 
and Miss MeQueen, equal; Bullock’ Hinke, FRENCH riemine; Antrobus ‘and Henderson, equal; Lyle, equal; Rudolph, Mise, and Gaziey, 
Miss, and Watte, equal; Harrison and 5—4 Kellam; McClan Mise, equal; Caley and Taylor and Gold- GRADUATE ATE SCHOOL 
MacKenzie, equal; Miss Butler and Miss Ww. Class I: Gallay and Miss Qwens and New- 


Class IIT; Beach and Bisaatt equal; Me-| berg, equal; Miller, Miss; Macdonald and 
Laren; Glermont, Miss “Sine Cooper | Redig, Miss, equal; Sherrifs, Miss, and Mac- 
and Peacock, equal; ‘fettery and Misa H.]Lennaen, Mise E., equal; Tinkham and 
Manning, equal: Miss “Swinarton andi Burke, equal; Bosmans and MeDougail, 
Stephena, equal; English; Iverson and Bar-| equal; Nielaen and Corneille, Miss, and Oar- 


Coone and Skitch, equal; Dickson and Wat- | house, Miss, equal; Coone, Misa .W.; Butler, 
son, equal; Miss Dalgleish and Klinek, }| Mise, and Woodford, equal i Borden, Miss; 
equal; Claxton and Walker,” equal: Miss |Adam, Mize, and Hinke, jon equal. 

Clarke and Ross, equal; Brearley and Miss| Class Il: Stewart, Miss; Killam, Miss; 


Class Il: Prevey, Miss; Skene, Miss. 
Class I7I: Clarke, Misa; McBeath, Miss. 
HYGIENE, 


Clasa If: Prevey, Miss; Clarke, Misa; 


EDUCATION 83 
Clase Il: Rosborough; Line; Miss Chale. 


chal eauah gaunt: Papal, ce, ae anes seuel: 
a ucktey, 8, Reh On, 
equ Ts Laws; Mins Becker and Hardin, Cromarty and Jones and McNichol, 1, “Miss, 
PHILOSOPHY 2 and Simmons, equal; Brown and mY, 
Clase I: Russell, L. & fark and Mise, atti Matheson ostrrand Obs uae 
: t: GC am ong: » Ge 
Froman, Ti: Borden ae and Young, equal; Brewer and Gerber, re ea Fagan, M Miles, and 
Brown: MacKenzie and Stewart, equal; |Smith, equal: Gin ay and’ Tor- 
Auzier; Oke and Stewart and Baker and|gerson, Miss, equal: Clarke and Wilson, 


and. Misa Woodhull, equal; Cairney. and 
\Boumans and Miss McBain and H. | Scott 
Miss Elmore and Evoy and Melling, equal; 
and Miss Watt, equal; Galbraith and Mc- 
Pherega and Slebert, ‘equal;- Mies Ewing; 

gs Cutter. 

Class 11%: Dunn; Lueas; Miss Mahafty; ij 
Miss Blue and Brenner equal; Taylor an 
Young, equal; "pulitker; Tennyson; 


Class I: Lazerte. 
Class th: Ficht; Wees. 


‘MATHEMATICS 104" BO 

Clase I: Young. : Does 
; PHILOSOPHY 108 ae 
Class Ti: Smith: Miss Chalmers. 
POLITICAL ECONOMY. ta 


McLaren; En lish and Fetter, equal; Miss . 

aime Beach and Shulman equal. Davids Clase ITE: Wild, Miss. #1 

° ; o' ; 
and Serteey, eae MacDonald, J. Da; Iver- conte I: Leahey; Bullard, Misa; Devlin: 
ton; Barker 

Clase I: Hargrave; Noble and. Thomas. 

Caer ee eee a tataa- and Walker, equal; Waines: De Silva, Mise: 
holme and Miss Torgetaon, equal; Miss Wil- Mawdsley: Richert; Lehmann. 
son rand Lehmann, anal: Miss Millar: Mise I: Weir; Riley; Robinson, Miss. 


Clase fT:  epUCATION. Ss ; Class 1: wane Oey 55 cos ‘equal; MiséV. Graham and and Hussetl i as and coh and Me =| caual: avers * Buick "ana mates 7 Opes naa ee : mi, Mise 
Claas Its Mise Bullard; Scott, R..J.: Ed-{| Class IT: Flem LATIN 1 Class Melt: Nix and MacDonnell and Bos-! Wright, “gavel “Wdwards: Baker and Mac-| Frazer: Miss. Flag ane a die 
Aine and sere eer and Torwers Me. Class fs: pelt" LOGY Bs Clase ie Pekarsky:, Range. Watson en senberry and Boyd,..equal; Holmes and donsid.. B. 3 Bo ual eireimom enuai: eawal. 

Neill, equal; Richards. GERMAN Eikecqal: Clark . , Allan, equal: Sorenson “and M. Bell and Stade and 4, cal: Misa, equal; Morrison; _PSvoHoLocy 82 


Barrett and Coone and Weir, equal; Eim- Cross, Te; Harrison. 


Class YT: Skiteh: Mise Lobb. Class I: Klingaman; Galbraith: 
ENGLISH 1 : Harm 
Class 1: Miss MeKeehnle; Sweeney: Mion | Miss, and Baker, equat; MacLennan and 


. bind et 
aplese the teres, Mrs Mies Heatheote 


Clase If: Sweeney; Halperin; Thorpe and | vote: and Thom . 1; MacCauley and. 
(Misa Saul, equal; Nielsen j Kellam; Miss Philp “and qroung, equal: Petteriey and M, 
M 


{TICAL ECONOMY ¢6 . 
Barraud; Mise Burritt Power, equali| not and C. own, equal; Treffry and 


POL 
Class If: Hargrave. 


Lyneh- H: Mi 1; Mise | Farmer, Misa, equal; Bell and. Liseemer, : . . ” 

Ropers enon feet, Priel | un Grams de, Malan | Geoncad, e gai = TUR Tae WIENER) one, PORTA POONOMT ST aainn | Sate 3 ae hae 
& €, Loe h ; 1 a Y. | , : ; : 
equal; ne “and Saddington and Runge,|_ Class Tit: Baardeath, Miss; Thompson, equal; Se ore and qi ‘Seasenverry and Redig and Crang, equal. equal: Manne, Misg, and Campbell, equal. Robertaoti. ck 
aval vii Watt and Miss. Broadbridge, Miss : Barnette. ne Rotter, eae Allen and Edwards, equal; Carliole, and Brralideen and Claes 1: We nLOsoPHY ar poset iT: Bes eh enon and Bh Sg en 
ent . i : ‘ on . vt . ; 

Clase Tit: MePherson and Mre: Basrdeeth | Tarnow, aise: equal Rizsral tad i Mal Mise Mclean, ‘equal: Fe i Lynel Staunton | Ciase (1: Bilverthorn, Miss; Harback;| English; Henderson; Bisset "fellows ; zert 
and Mise Parkinson, edual: Miss. Burritt:{equals Gimby, ise, Scott, equal: Cortiwall ‘and Mine and | Harris; Watts and, Millar, Mion, and iit, Cooper: Stephens and French, fom: Poabhor Miss Simenstin; Mist on; M 
ranner and Pekarsky and Miss. Lyae,. ual Meadows, equal; Bbariawe Brown and Kell y Miss Swain and Van Buren, equal; Miss Toby; Claxton and Stade, equal; Matheson: rown and Clepmon winkel: Reokwnod. a5 
Wershof “and A. + Hobbs, equal; and pkitoruk . “and Cooper, equal; Sami as : Miss. Dickson: Famiiton and MeLaug hlin; Miss Willison and Hargrave, pine ah 1" Tonkson and Mae. mats Mise, sana he 
i a a piss aitmond ‘a farieen and not oe GERMAN ; Misa McKowan, equal: Mice c oF Get | Ofass If: Miss Wilson and Misa MeCal- Clase it: "Giase and Johuston- and Silver wc” Is MoAilister ; 
hull, equal;..MacLennan snd. Parker and{ Class I: Runge: MAN 1S. Barclay, Miss. | MacKensie and Migs Sherriffs and Sommer- lum, equal; Brearley Hodes Thompson, , Spel: thorne, Ming, | equal; McClung ; wm iron | “Claes tt: Mans, 
Miss M. McDonald and Miss Thomson and Cisse tis Morrison; Coone, Misa W. y.. | ville, equal; Adams ond Toole, equal; ‘Miss Lobb ‘and Miss Me ¢cQ . eguis ile aes a verean ; ohne an bast 
Freeman and Geissinger and. Mias Shiain;:| Gigag. IIf: McEwen; Hobbs; ‘Bos'd: | Nykiforuk. and Rogezs, equal; Miss Broad. | and Johuston an dj we “3 re octal oO) erte on, ‘ aage 4 re and & iene 
equal; O'Brien. and Miss Barraud and Miss Wright: Banks and Swination, Miss, equal: | bridge; Archibald; ‘Mies Chauvin and | Coat tas and Goo O08 Ht an ton, M *° Cooper, aise. : bul | equal: 8 ley: ae 
Chauvin, equat; Archfbald avid’ Hobbs, F../ Peterson and Mies Paterson, sg heals ‘Ba- Dockeritl, ual; Misa Alten; Scott; Folkina, Malco: on equal; MacGregor, J. ‘man, equal; eriteon an @, equal, equal: Tavende onda rin eso 
)ttd Chambers and Fuog, equal; Scott, H | monds and Wilson, Fanuing;| Mise J. and Morrison, W., and Scott, Miss | Verty: Page POLITICAL ECONOMY 102 HE: ' 
and Brynildsen and Rowers and. White and | Miss; Crawford and’ Mies Mat “sciliches aed and. Em- | 1, and MeBain, Mies D., equal; Keir, Miss Class. IL: HY, Satna Class t: Grindley; Donnell. 
Trowbridge, equal: Thorpe, A., and -Hal-) mett and Thomeon, C. neg. : Cs tlt ane ine; ui, in; Bheppard; PSYCHOLOGY st 
; ee eq) a Buriak xs bare i Li GERMAN a lass oT: R EATIN 3 Watson; Teddi iY ts Chace h Woe: Harkack Clermont, Mi 
jor w aser, J: 4, equs : * cnge: : r : . i; : bo 88; 
Scat, A, and Fraser, C. Gand Mise Seott Giees il: Ente: Carlson and. tanr,/ ‘sttse Kineeman and Fase, equal, Mahon + cane do enteek Mrg, Newland: Siebert: Johnstons, (Thompson; 
@ ond Miss Harmel and Clark and McKenale, | qual; MeKitrick, Miss: Maleslin ¥ + Clase Tt: Richardson and Barrand, Mise | Mat ieee tit ‘er tone 3 Mien Evans; Riley. and Fieming and Skene, equal; : : 
7. P., and ‘Thorpe, B., Class 1H: Goodall; Sprang na; Johnstone and|V>. and, Clark snd Cooper. | Mis "wins Bel 1 enySs 1A Sturrock and Wilson, equal: Watt | elas ttt Ee Lt mr ei. 
a eGregor, equal. eqial; ® @ , ss HYSICS ‘4 : na? Grete a8 : 
Clase I: Butler Miss’ Graig, Miss, ana | MASOFFOr MAN 63 equal; ‘Halperin and Wershof, equal; Rogers | Glass 17, Gaadinaton, A aitenen, 0. |Stuals Beott and” ‘Walker, =P Mins, equal, et 
Harris, equal, te ” Olea I: aie Witten: cusp ona Arent bald sad eer Powe an m, Clase 3 Midee ee Be a, yaa na . le tas Moyle: Evans; Begg and lp, 
! $ i}. i: Welt : Bh Misa, an 2: : : Edwards; , EB. Bi: Frisk 3 | equal. " 
Wt Ma, Seg" Mie Bi | yh Moin Me Bnet Wann, | ae ar oe ire, Maca |e aaeh bane, EM syenopooy en, {e 
Titts, Mise, and Stuart: equal; ’ aga at: i * “  Pequals Bewy; yf yual, : Lea ts oN. Bs dixon Its HOLOG + aerloote, i . 
icvisngad Mowngne ileal teen; | lane 1; RameO MURS Party | wtih edt aca Gein te Medan anhaee BT Drtatttnton we | ag Mar cs any ane [QRZ 
hat RIT ait hati wae: Seog at Wittman Paar) ae seen | Manat ig abaya Yase, 2. | Seeerc ye wae eSSen sce | 
: , my ‘ot Mise: ir , Mien; , ics A Se M I "equal; | equal: ‘Lucas, 2. Wes i, ané Lyac. | McBeath; aon. e 
Bid Mies Btewart, equal: Mins ¥. ‘Bell; Miss |). Mies: one ae Manan: i ‘as and ott a8 im wal a .; 
,e Cullum 3 an | Bomary Go ‘Mise A. D. equal; tore L., “and White, ¥ 64. 
"ae a ike and Ming 1. New. bell iiss, and Whittord ‘Thorpe: dames. Mi fae Cand oF ty Bes end. 13. P., equal ‘ ee Sa Pa on 


“Pa ‘Henderton: 
Kiteley, ies Flack ‘And Matthews, ‘Mies 


: si 
"bridge: Reed; Mis equal; Woodh a 
‘Malan, Mise a. a Tames, Miss é: opin ate Burritt, a, "eed a i ceahae Ly 


" 


PAGE EIGHT 


~~ FACULTY OF 
| MEDICINE 


ANATOMY 2.5 
Class I: MacPherson; Cain; Giffen. 
Class II: Grisoff and Rosenthal, 
equal; Annett; Galbraith and Hunt, 
equal; Murray: Watt; Baldwin and 
Stoner and Wright, equal; Cockle and 


Harlow and Mahafty, equal; Joyee 
and Rush, equal 
Class Til: tuart; Smith, Migs. 
ANATOMY 6.8 


Class I: MacLean; Gowda, 

Class Il; Husband and. Powell, 
equal; Richardson; Lesik; Murray; 
Zakus; Boykowich (Anatomy 8° on- 


ly). 
ANATOMY 12 
Class II: MaePherson; Rosenthal; 
Hunt; Baldwin; Cain and Grisoff, 
equal; MacLean; Rush and Wri ght, 
gaual; ual and Galbraith and Gif- 


fen, equal; Harlow; Cockle’ and 
Watts, equal ; Stoner. 

Class ITI: "Mahaffy; Annett and 
Joyce, equal: Murray and Stuart, 


equal. ; 
ANATOMY 14 

Class I: Cain. 

Class IT: Rosenthal; Baldwin; Gal- 
braith; Hunt; Annett and Watts, 
equal; MaePherson; Harlow; -Grisoff 
and Stoner, équal. 

Class III: Giffen; Cockle; Mahaffy; 
Rush; Murray; Wright; Stuart, 

ANATOMY 223 

Class I: Gowda. 


Class II: MacLean; Powell; Hus- 
_ band; Zakus; Richardson; "Lesik; 
Murray; Boykowich. 
ANATOMY 23 
Dentistry 


Class If: Gerrie; Lloyd; Williams; 
Sutherland; Ahrens. 
Clasg Ii: Burstein. 


ANATOMY 63 
Class I: Laudan and Weinlos, 
equal; Campbell. 

Class IT: Lee; Whitworth; Buriak 
and Lobal, equal; Whiteside; Chap- 
pelle; Currie and Zadra, equal; 
Crawford; Begg; Malo. 

Class LT: Bradford and Bradley, 
equal; Christie; Luoren, 

ANATOMY 84 
Class I: Campbell and Laudan, 


equal. 

Class II: Weinlos; Whitworth; 
Crawford; Begg and Lobel, equal; 
Currie; Chap ppelle and Lee, equal; 
Bradford and Buriak, equal; Bradley 
and Christie and Whiteside, equal. 


Cidss ITI: Malo; Zadra; Luoren. 


ANATOMY 60 
Class I: Weinlos; Laudan. 
Class II; Buriak; Whitworth; 
Campbell and Chappelle, equal: 
Begg; Bradley and Currie, equal 


Crawford and Lee, equal; Lobel. 

Class Til: Bradford; Whiteside; 
Dobry;. Luoren; Zadra. 

BACTERIOLOGY $1 

Class IT: Weinlos and Whitworth, 
equal; Lee: Bradford and Campbell, 
and Chappelle and Laudan, equal; 
Buriak; Currie; Malo. 

Class III: Begg and Dobry, equal; 
Bradley and Zadra, equal; Christie: 
Whitside; Reeves; Crawford. 


BIOCHEMISTRY 1 
Class I: Laudan and Lee, equal. 
Class IL: Currie; Weinlos and Whit- 
worth, equal; Crawford; Bradford 
and Chappelle, equal; Begg, Buriak. 
Class Ul:, ; Whiteside; Lobel and 
Malo, equal; Bradley; Zadra; Chris- 
tie; Dobry. 
BIOCHEMISTRY 1 
entistry 
Class II: Gerrie; Campbell and Wil- 
liams, equal; Sutherlan 
Class HI: Burstein and Lloyd, 
equal; Ahrens; Wilkingon. 
BIOCHEMISTRY 51 
Class. I: Crawford; McKenzie. 
Class IT: Buell and Taliman, equal; 
Giberson; Nix and Rawlinson, equal: 
Jarrett; ‘Anderzon; Smith; McLean; 
Davies "and Flater, equal; Chisholm 
and Hollies, equal; Hicks and Lang- 
ston, equal. 
Class HI: Halabiskey and Haworth 
and Sprague, equal; Stauffer; Ver- 


chomin;. Greenber: and Wilson, 
equa}; Brunton; ipson; Agnew; 
MacDonald. 


BIOCHEMISTRY 82 
Class I]: Matas} Krause and Stril- 
chuk, equal; Hamilton, Miss; Levey; 
Michie and Saunders, equal; Ward; 
Caswell, Miss; Verreau; Genereaux 
and Lyness, Miss, equal. 
Class. TII:- Kershaw; Campbell; 
Watayk; Megas; Kirk atrick. 
BOTAN 
Class 11: Foster; Schroeder; Brown; 
Stephens; Thomson and Dunn, equal; 
Valens; Borrowman ; 3 Ever 
Class IIT: Mellin alley and 
Shemeluck and Kickham, equal; Spar- 
gos and Ellis, equal; Dumouchel; Mof- 
at; Werthenbach and Simpson and 
Forbes, equal; _ Greenlees; Muteh- 
mor; Lowry; Galbraith, 
CHEMISTRY 2 
Class IZ: Forbes: Brown and Sie- 
bert, equal. 
Class TT: Lowry; Galbraith; 
Motcbmor; Kafoury. 
CHEMISTRY 2 
Medicine 
Class 1: Brown. and Stephens, 
equal Borrowman; Foster; Schroed- 


Class Hi: Valens; Dunn; Lesk; 
Walley; Thomson; Dumouchel; Ayles- 
worth; Greenlees, 

CHEMISTRY 3 
- Dentistry 
Class I: Gowda. 
Class IJ: Zakus. 
Ps IH: Murray; McLean; Le- 


Husband; Powell; Richardson 
pa Haworth, cual. 
CHEMISTRY 3 
Modicies 


Class Ti: Hunt; Grisoff; Cain; Me- 
Pherson; Harlow; nthal, 
Class "TH: Annett and Galbraith, 
equal; Wright; Coekle. 
CHEMISTRY 61. - 
Class HE: -Gerrie and Williams, 
equal; Lloyd. 


Class Til: Ahrens and Sutherland, 
equal Burstien; Wilkinson. 
CLINICAL MEDICINE 81 
Class I: Crawford; Giberson. 
~ Glaus O: Hollies; Buell; Jarrett; 
Haworth; _ Agnew and. MeDonald, W 
a equal ; Lipson and Spra gue equal 
oo Ebeks Kenzie. ane Nis uals 
aes equal; Davies; Anderson 
‘and Pieter and ‘Wilson, equa + Ver. 


4 and 


1 Agnew; Smith; 


ae Haliisky and a clean, ' 


equal; y Tallman; Smith; Lan 
Greenberg, e 
Class I: Brunton; Kennedy. 
' CLINICAL MEDICINE 82 
Class If: Michie and  Sadinders, 


1; M }; 
equal; Levey; Genereaux; Kershaw |sicsi: “Grundere’ and "Sesienaks ts. 
and Watayy: et Megas “and Ma- Slane , IIE: Wats k.and Gen aM 
cnu vets ‘auise an a- ss ateyk an éréux an iss 
tas, equal ‘camera, Misa; Verreau: CT Ee and Verreau, equal; 


Hamilton, ‘Migs Kirkpatrick; Lyness, 


‘Class II: Campbell. 


CLINICAL MEDICINE 53 

Class I:. McGregor, Miss; Lewis; 
Badie and Lee, equal. 

Class If: Grimson; Bercov; Wes- 
ton; Glenn and Leisemer and Mor- |, 
row, equal; Law. 

DENTISTRY 1 

Class I: Gowda; MacLean atid Za- 
kus, equal. 

Glass Il: Richardson; Lesik; Hus- 
band; Powell. 

Class III: Murray. 

DENTISTRY 2 
Lecture 

Class I: Gerrie; Sutherland; Lioyd; 
Williams. 

Class Il: Burnstien; Ahrens. 


DENTISTRY 2 


Lab. 
Class I: Sutherland; Gerrie; Ah- 
rens; Lloyd. 
Class II: Williams; Burstien, 


DENTISTRY 3(a) 
_ Class I: Sutherland; Ahrens; Ger- 


rie, 
Class Mt: : Lileyd; Williams; Bur- 


stien. 
DENTISTRY 3 (b) , 
Clase I; Sutherland; Gerrie; Abrens. 
Clase TI: Lieyd; Williams; Buratien. 


Ni 

Class Wit: Forbes; 
and Moffatt, equal. 

FRENCH 45 

Class I; Brown; Siebert. 

Class IT: Valens; Strohan and Kickham, 
equal; Cummings and Borrowman, equal; 
Forbes and Brown, R. J., edual; Green- 
lees; O'Toole 
Aylesworth, equal; Werthenbach and Lowry 
and Bis, equal; Shemeluck; Hodgson; 
Doumouchel. 

Class Hl: Mutchmor and Lesk, 
Simpson; Walley; Meiling; Kafoury. 

. 45 


Class Li: Schrueder; Duna. 


SH 1 
Shemeluck; Kafoury 


Clasa LE: Stephens and Buriak, equal; 
Thomson. 
HYGIENE 63 
‘Class I: Levey. 
Class Il: Ward; Watsyk; Megas; Michie; 


Matas; Strilchuk; Caswell, Mise; Kershaw 
Campbell; Krause. 

Class (1: Missa Lyness; Verreau; Saun- 
ders; Miss Hamilton. 

MATERIA MEDICA 3 

Class Il: Harlow; Giffen and Rosenthal 
and Stoner, equal; Watts; McPherson and 
Ruah, equal; Hunt; Galbraith; Calder and 
Murray, equal; Grisoff; Baldwin; Cockle, 
Mass Joyee; Cain. 

Ciasa LIT: iene: Annett; Stuart; Miss 
Smith; Miss Mahat 

MATERIA’ MEDICA 4 

Glasa Ill: Lloyd; Gerrie; Sutherland and 

Ahrens and Burstein’ and Williame, equal. 
MATHEMATICS 32 

Cisas I: Dunn; Brown, R. J.; Schroeder; 
Hodgaen; Aylesworth; Thomason. 

Class IL: Evoy; Borrowman and Forbes, 
equal; Strohan; Foster and Lesk, equal; 
Lowry, Kafoury; Ellis and .Valens, equal; 
Dureouchel; Walley; Siebert. 

Class I: Cummings and. Edmonds, equal; 
Werthenbach; Greenlees and Bimpson, equal; 
O'Toole and Shemeluck, equal: Galbraith ; 
Lemieki: Melling; Brown, H. K.;-Misa Ei- 
more end Webber, e 


Ciase VW: Levey; Ward; Matas; Megas; 
Watsyk; Miss Hamilton and 8trilchuk, 
equal; Michie. 


Clase UE: Verresu Krause; Campbell and, 


Kershaw, equal; Genereux; Saunders; Miss 
Caswell and Mise Lyness, equal; Kirk- 
patric 

OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY 52 

Clase I: Lewis; Morrow. 

Class ii: Weston; Eadie and Lee and Miss 
MeGregor, equal; Bercov and Glenn, equal; 
Grimson ; Leisemer. 

Class i: Le 

OPHTHALMOLOGY AND R.-0.-L. 51 

Class I; Levey. 

Class If: Ward; Kershaw; Saunders and 
Strilehuk, equal: Megas> Michie and Krause, 
equal; Miss Lyness; Watsyk and Genereux, 
equal; Kirkpatrick; Mates and Campheil 
and Mise Caswell, equal; a Hamilton. 


$2 
Class Lee; Eadie; 
Leisemer; Grimson. 
Clases It: Miss McGregor; Bereov and 
Glenn, equal; Pye and Weston, equal. 
ATHOLOGY 51 oa 
Clasa I; Thine 
Class 11: Giberson, Miss; McKenzie; 
Crawford; Rawlinson; MacLean; Nix; Buell 
and Hollies and Sprague,equal; Hicks; Wil- 
aon; Flater and Haworth and Jarrett, 
eqnal, 
Class UI: Chisholm and MacDonald, equal; 


Lewis; 


Stauffer; Halabisky and Lipson, equal; An- 
derson; Davies and Greenberg, equal; 
Agnew. 
PATHOLOGY 53 
Class I: 


Ward. 

Class Il: W3iritchuk; Kershaw; Genereux; 
Megas; Krauee and Levey and Matas and 
Saunders, equal; Watayk; Michie. 

Class [1]: Miss Caswell; Miss Hamilton; 
Miss Lyness and Verreau, equal; Campbell; 


sirkpatrick: 
HARMACOLOGY 51 
Class II: Pavlineons Crawford; Sprague; 
Flater; Tallman; Mise Giberson; MacLean; 


Jarrett; Buell and Davies, equal; Ver- 
chomin. 
Clase Ill: Nix; McKenzie; Wilson; Ha- 


worth and Stauffer, equal; Smith; Anderson; 
Langston; Agnew and Chisholm and Mac- 
Donald, equal; i Zuipeon and Halabisky, equal. 


ACY 3 
Laudan; Whitworth; 


Class Ix Zadra; 
Lee; Crawford; Christie; Begg and White- 
side, equal. 

Class’ 21I: Weinlos and Gampbell and 
Currie, equal; Dobry: Malo: Buriak; Brad- 


ford; Reeves and Chappelle, Pein 
PHYSICS 1A, LECTURE 
Class Il: Miss Whiteside. 


'vSICS 1A, 
Class Tl: Misa Whiteside. 
PHYSICS 8 
Giese ii: wine 
‘7 H ySICS 
. PHYSICS 8, LAB. 


Clase 1: Dunn; Bro 
Clase He Thomson; Eile; Hodgson. 
1 
PHYS! 11, LECTURE 

Class If: Foster: Borrowman; Valens. 

Class Til: Brown; Schroeder and Simpson, 
equal; Forbes; Lowry ; Greenleets; Kafoury; 
Lesk and Moffatt, equal; Evoy and Wer« 
thenbach, equal; Ayliworth and Molling, 


equal. 
PHYSICS 11, LAB. 

Class Il; Foster; Lowry; Borrowman; 
Schroeder; Valens; Aylesworth; Brown and 
Galbraith Poel 

Class Kickham;. Forbes and. Mutch- 
mor, sual Evoy;: lees and Werthen- 
hech,equal; Leek; Kafoury; Miva Elmore and 
Belling; Du- 


P 
Clase Hi: Husband; Gor 
MacLean and Powell equal: 
Ohiae Ls tanks Borkowichs Zane 
Class V1: tavdan Bariakt Wainios; Brad- 
ford; Chape! and Crawford, equal; Lee; 
Christie: "Whitworth: Eampbell and Dobry, 


H TAR S 

rola nt ia a'dadra, eaual; Brad- 
ley: 2 

mii HYSIOLOGY 51 
Clase I omer 

Class ih: Sprague: Tallman; Fister: Buell: 
Miss Giberson; MacKeusle and Nix, équal; 
Haworth: Davies, Jarrett; Halabiaky. and | J 
Lipson, ‘equal; “Maclean ‘and . Rawlinson, 
eal. 
“Tings IE: Stautter; Verchomis 
Donald; Wilson, 

PSYCHIATRY 

Clase Mf: Miles MeGregors” Lee; Bercav; 
Grimadn ; Liesem 

alr eadie Terie: oa Herow Weston, 
equal; je KY SURGER hd “ 


Class I: Crawford. 

Class Il: Raw! on i Ta Moulton, awa 
MoKenale, o< aqusls Mix en, equals 
Haworth ba sa uet 
Hicks; "Mine Gtberson “nd  istltes, eine 


SL 


gston 
tauffer, equal; ‘Chisholm and |B. 


equal ; | ta! 


Clans 
Danks end Miller, equa 


} Langston; bE 
Chisholm; Anderson: Mac- 


v 32 
: Gass I: Taylor; Walton 
- Clase: Th: Gale: “wniteaker; Kunst; white; 


| Mealing; | 


THM GATEWAY _ 


uel s wipon: Chisholm: ‘Davies and: Lip. | 

} Plater and Langston and Me- 

Donald and Smith, “equal. 1 
Cleat a Brunton; Greenb 

Miderson.: equal; Halabisky; th 


SURGERY 52 
Class ff: Ward; Kershaw ‘and | Levey, 


Agnew and 
Kennedy; 


Lewis: Miss 
Grimaon: 


Cisse Ut; ‘Glenn: Law; Lee; Li 
‘THERAPEUTICS S10 


Class LIE: Miehle and Saunders, ennat: 
Levey and Ward, equal; Watsyk; Misa Cus- 
well; Genereux; Kershaw, 

Class IIL: Megas; Strilchuk; Miss Hamil- 
ton and Krause, equal; Matas: Miss Lyness; 
Kirkpatrick; Campbell: Verreau. 

THERAPEUTICS 62 

Class Il: Lee; Grimson; Lewis. 

Clase UI: Bereav and Eadie, equal; Glenn 
and Law and Mise MeGregor, equal; Mor- 
row; Weston: Leitseme 


OXICOLOGY 31 
Class I: Levy, Saunders. 
Clase il: Ward; Megas and Strilchuk, 
equ 
Clase Ill: Hamilton, Mise, and Krause, 
equal; Michie; Matas and Watsyk, equal: ; 
Campbell: Kershaw and Verreau, equal; 
Kirkpatrick end Misa Lyness, equal: 
Genereux. 
ZOOLOGY 2 
Class HI: Stephens; ‘Brown, R. R. J.; Foster: 
Brown, H: K,, and Ellis, equal; Borrowman 


and Dunn and Valens, equal; Lowry; Walley. 

Class 111: Forbes; Dumouchel and Melling 
and Siebert, equal; Muatchmor and Schroeder 
and Thompson, equal; Kickham; Simpson 
and Werthenbach, equal: Strohan: Gal- 
braith and Shemeluck, equal. 


FACULTY OF APPLIED 
SCIENCE 


Cc. &.1 

Class I: Hargrave and Taylor, 
Walton and Willis, equal; 
and Moorhouse, equal. 

Class IE: Whittaker; Gale ‘and Svarich, 
equal; Bocock and Kiinst, equal; Watson: 
Bowrwan; Armstrong; White. 

Class WH: Dean; Houston; Selnes; Meal- 


“ MATERIALS OF CONSTRUCTION 
Class I; Taylor and Walton, equal; Whit- 
Clase Ii: Kunst; McPherson; 


Houston; Armstrong and Watson and 
White, equal; Willis; Gale. 


equal; 
Drew; ; MePherson 


and Foster and Evoy and | ing 


Drew; 


Class III: Moorshouse; Fullerton; Dean. 
. E. 82 
Clasa IT:. Fetter; Davidson; Macdonald. 
‘Clases IT; Davidson and Fetter, equal. 
Class UI: Macdonald. 
Cc. EL 88 
Class I: Grindley. 
Class ti: Knighton: Fetter; Baldwin sand 


Muir, equal; Underw 
Class IIL: Stewarts ‘Tames; Mealing. 
LAB. 


Cc. 8s 
Clags 1: Knightor 
Class I: Tames; 
Baldwin; Stewart. 


¢ 
‘etter; Muir. 
nderwood; Mealing; 


Class Ill: Grindley. 
Cc. BE. 87 ' 
Clase Il: Osterland; Muir; Knighton; 
Mealing. 


Class Il: Paterson; Grindley. 
€. E. 87 (LAB.) 
Ciasa [: Muir. 
Class H: Osterland; 
Paterson, 
Clase ITI: Grindley. 


Cc. £. 88 
Class II: Macdonsld; Davidson. 
Cc. EB. 62 : 
Claas I: Fetter; Cox. 
Class II: Muir. 
_Clsns UI; Grindley. 
“Class 


Class 


Knighton: Mealing: 


63 
Macdonald. 
- EB. 66 
if: Fetter; Davidson; Macdonald. 
67 


Class I: fetter. 
Class II: Cox and Stewart, equal; 
ley; Muir; Baldwin; 


jand, equal. 
Class TE: Davidson; Macdonald. 
CHEMISTRY 1 
Class I: Taylor. 
Class Il; Kunst; Whitaker; Bocock and 
Drew and McPherson and White, equal. 
Clase IH: Laverty and Watson, equal: 
Armstrong and Willis, equal; Moorhouse 
ang Walton, equal; Fullerton and Gale and 
Houston, equal. 
CHEMISTRY 81 


c. EB. 
I:. Davidson; 


Grind- 
Ferguson and Oster- 


Cc. BE. 74 


Class II: Knighton. 
_ Clase Til: Mealing, 
CHEMISTRY 60 
Clases I: Gowan. 
Clase Hl; Underwood; Baldwin; Stewart: 
Tames. 
DRAWING 2 
Class I: Melnyk. 
Class II: Kyle; Gudmundsen; Olekszy; 


Porteus; Ortner; Pollock and Walton, equal; 
Lewis and Weir, equal; Noble and Thomson, 
equal; Moon. 


Clase UWI: Dick and Jones, equal; Olsen; 
Hargrave;, Piper and Vosa, equal: i Tynch- 
util. 


Staunton ‘and MacGregor, equal; 
DRAW 4 
Class L: Porteus; Melek Kyle. 
Class Il: Olen; - Laverty; Moen: Kemp; 
Noble; Ortner; Jones and Walton, ‘equal. 
Class IIT: Christensen and Hargrove, 
equal; Bibby and Dutil and Thomason, equal; 
McClintock and Bocock, equal; Morris; 
Weir; Piper and Pollock, equal; Dick and 
Gudmundsen and Olekszy, equal. 


Gs 
Class I: Drew and Taylor, equal. 
Class Il: Armstrong and Kunst, equal; 


McPherson: Gale and Hargrave and Bow- 
man, equal; Whittaker; Walton and Willis, 
equal; Watson; Bocock and Selnes, equal; 
Moorhouse. 

Class Iti: Houston; Svarich and White, 
qeual; Dean. i. st 


E. E. 
Clase If: Osterland. 
Class IL: Faterson. 


E. 
Clase I: oFtefart: Geneon. 
E..E. 83 


Class Tl: Knighton; Fetter; Muir. 
Class Ili: Grindley ; Meal ng. 


MT: Onterland: Baldwin. 
E. E. 88 


I: Osteriand. 
Il: Ferguson; Paterson, 
E. 76 


Clase 1: Gowan 

Class Hf: Gtewart and Underwood, equal; 
Tames; Baldwin. 

Clase Ill: Ferguson. 

.E (LAB.) 

Clans 1: Gowan and Underwood, equal: 
Stewart and Tames, equal. 

Class It: Baldwin; Ferguson. 


gE. 
T: Uddersrosd. 
: Btewart aid Tames, equal; 


Class 


Class 
Clase 


Baldwin: 


Clase Ii: 
Baldwin. 


£. £. 78 
as It: Underwood; Tames. 
Jase Ill: Stewart; Baldwin. 


a Rae 


Tames; F erart: Underwood; 


Class 1: Gowan. 
Claas ui : Tames; Stewart; Baldwin and 
Underwood, equal. 


BE. E. 91 . 
Clase 1; Tames 
Class a Underwood; Stewart, 
Clase LI; Baldwie ati 


Hango; HeFarend; Field; Le 


aera cr 
equal; “Markle; Kemp and 

d Carter 
equal; Haré 
gtove and Christensen nh Attewell, equal. 


Claes 1: Bibby 4: Moon. 
Nase It: Fullerton: Guédmundson: Malnyk: 
es and Gleen, equal; Dutil; Walton and 
on, equal; Piper; McClintock; 


s Glogs 10 “31: Porteus; White: aneittann: 
ten omeon: Morris eThve; Svarich; 


Moore ; i Belnes. 

Caee Hit: Wille? Bverieh; Watson: Dean | 
‘and. MoPherson, equal; Axmatrong and, 
Dre#; equal. 


Class HB: erpteer “Leabenaid and 


Chase Ti: Witten-Ciarke. 


cise I: — rT 
aa: GEOLOGY | 
Olas Il Olerkes La 


Clark te Clark: Sones. 
Clase Ill: Bth 


* hh Ethel 


Big Olekasy. 
HISTORY 1 
tT MegFarand a, Osburn, equal: 
Cla: +: Hange an 10 
Miller? Carter: 1 Pela; Eehanky Harcourt, 
¢ hey 


ft, 
Class UL: Johmetone: Green and Smtith 


e; Jones. 


ual; Kocher; Pinckney and Stapleton and 
Thompson, equal: Duncan and Wilkinson, 
equal; McMillan; Seat a 

HISTOR F SCIENCE 

Class 1; Kuanat; Taylor. 

Clase 1: Watson; Walton; © Houston; 
Selnes; Drew and Whitaker, equal; Arm- 
strong and Bocock, equals oorthouse ; 
Laverty. ° 


Class Ill: White; Gale; Dean and Willa 
and Svarich, equal; MePherson. 
HYGIENE 81 
Class 1: Tames; Stewart. 
Class If: Clarke; Underwood; Davidson, 
Baldwin; ney, 
Ines III: Jones and Mcdonald, equal, 
2 


MA 

Clase I: Field; Mevarland, . 

Class Il; Ainsworth; Lewis: Parry; 
Hango; ¥ Hie; Harcourt; Dick, Lakusta. 

Class : Smith: Johnstone and Thomp- 
son, equal; Osburn; Miller and Smith, 
equal: Green and Markle, equal; Wilkin- 
son, 

MATHEMATICS 21 

Class I: Melnyk. 

Class TI: Dutil; Gudmundson and Jones, 
equal; Porteus; Kyle and Piper, equal; 
Olsen: Bowman and Ortner, equal. 

Class ITI; Kemp and Thomson, equal; 
Olekszy ; Pollock; Walton; Svarich; "Acheson 
and Hargrave, equal Christensen; Moon. 

MATHEMATICS 22 

Class If: Melnyk; Jones; Bowman; Gud- 
mundson; Moon; Houston; Olsen. 

Class U1: Walton; Ortner; Morris and 
Piper and Kyle, equal; Kemp and Porteus, 
equal; Pollock; Dutil; Olekszy and Bibby, 
equal; Acheson and Hargrave. 

MATHEMATICS 25 

Clase I: Taylor. 

Class II: Drew; Willie; Whittaker. 

Class Ii; Walton; Mealing and Paterson; 
Moorehouse and McPherson, equal; Kunet; 
Watson; Gale. 

MATHEMATICS 26 
Class I: Taylor ; 

Clase II: Drew: , Willis; Jones; Kunst. 

Class Ti: Walton; Moorehouse; Whit- 
taker; Mesling; McPherson; Gale and Wat- 


gon, equal. 
MATHEMATICS 53 
Class I: Fetter. 
Class II: Muir; Cox. 
Clase III: Grindley: 


MATHEMATICS. 87 (2nd HALF) 
Class I: Gowan. 
MATHEMATICS 63 
Class I: Gowan. 
Clase Ill: Muir. 
. £. 58 
Clasa IT: Clarke; Lawton. 
M. E. 66 
Clasa Il: Clarke: Ethridge. 
: Ethridge. 
.E. 88 
: Clarke; Lawton; Jones. 
M. E. 
Ill: Ethridge. 
M. E. 
I: 


Class 
Clase 
Class 


Jones; Clarke. 
Hi: Ethridge; Lawton. 


M. E. 62 
I? Clarke and Ethridge, equal. 
Ti: Lawton; Jones. 

M, E. 63 
Il’ Clarke; Jones. 
6s 


Class I: Clarke; Lawton. 


Clasa 1: Clarke. 
Class II: Lawton. . 
PHYSICS 1 . 

Class I: McFarland; Hango.- 

Class IF: Field; Lewis; Green; 
Markle; Lakusta ; Dick. 

Clase HI: Thompson; Osbourn; Harcourt 
and Wyllie, equal; Dunean; Lehanky; Wil- 
kingon; Miller: Smith and Stapleton, equal; 


Class 
Clase 


Class 
Class 


Class 


Parry; 


Johnstone; Horne and MeMillan, equal; 
Attewell and Pinkney, equal; Smith and 
Trick, equal. 
PHYSICS 1 (LAB.) 
Class ts ried) Hango; Parry. 
Class : Hakeourt; Thompson; Dick; 
Pinkney ay Wyllie, equal; Kocher; Lewis 


and McFarland, equal; Green; Trick; Dun- 
can. 

Class IY: Smith and Stapleton and Le- 
hanky and Wilkingon and Markle, equal; 
Johnatone; Miller and Lakusta, ‘equal; Car- 
ter; Horne; Attewell; Smith; Osbourn. 


cs 3 
Class I: Meinyk. 
Class If: Olsen; Porteus; Kyle; 
Gudmundson; Noble; McGregor; Hargrave. 
Class Ul: Piper; Kemp; Ortner: Pollock: 
Lynch-Staunton; Dutil and Moon, equal; 


Thompson. . 
PHYSICS 3 (LAB.) 

Clasa I: Jones. 

Class Hi: Kyle; Moon; Pollock and Por- 
teus, equal; Lynch-Staunton and Melnyk, 
equal; Gudmandson and Olson _and Walton, 
equal; Acheson; Dati] and Kemp, equal: 
McClintock; Noble and Piper, equal: Voss 
and Bibby and Hargrove and Ortner, equal. 


Jones ; 


Class HI: Olekszy and Thomson, equal; 

White; Morris. 
PHYSICS 6 

Class I: Taylor. 

Class i: Willis; McPherson; Kunst: 
Walton; Whittaker; Drew; Fullerton. 

Class it Armstrong; Moorehouse; 
Selnes; Watson; Gale Houston and Pat- 
tergon, equal. 


PHYSICS 6 (LAB.) 
Class If: Taylor; Kunst and Moorehouse, 
equal; McPherson and Wallon, equal; Drew; 


8. 
: White; Willis: Selnes; Hous- 
ton and Whittaker, equal; Armstrcng and 
Dean, equal; Fullerton. 

tn: Law i ysics 8 


rty. 

paysles 8B (LAB.) 
Il: Laxerty. 
PHYSICS 12 


Class 
Class 
Class 
Class 
Class 
Class 

Class I ‘inderwood; ,pelawia. 

POLITICAL ECONOMY 
Class I: Bow! 
Cle POLITICAL ECONOMY 68 
rr) 


1: F 
Glass TE: ' Osterland:; Ferguson and Un- 


derwood, eqial; Grindley; Knighton; Wil- 
sagt Davidson and Lawton, equal; 


ir. 
¢ » I0l: Cox and Tames, equal; Mac- 
donald and Stewart, equal; Baldwin. . 


FACULTY OF 
AGRICULTURE 


: MacG rs ker ; 
ti Maecenie! 9 aud Young, equal. 
Itt: Carlyle: Foster. 

Class Il: Asplund ‘and. Robinson, equal; 
Melutyre; Morrison; Keer and Manson and 
Prior, equal; Engifsh; McFall: Phillips; 
Thompson; Jobnagn. 

Gata mt: Howe; Kelly! -Mataher; Lewis: 
Cisse Tit: MeArs. : ee 
_ Chaas Ts Anderson, "Gentleman. 


A. £. 
Claes I: Mosstnan; "fran and Mawdstey, 


equal, 
ANIMAL HUSBANDRY 
Clas it Carlyle: Little; Y gacGres NESOT; 
Young:! Alen Walker: i Posteri ; 


ay L ENOANES and 


Claws. Tt: Gentleman 
ya Ee der 
Andersen and. ‘Revell, reat Be en Joh: 
an. 


+. f ares in 
wie I: cas 
Class Ms Moseman; Thompuan; N. G. 


USBANDRY €8 
Ging T: oe a <i, 
Be ie Bs and Gormiot, 


‘| equat; Howe: Thompson, N 
nal; De 


pe ae 


om tein, equal: 


ouual. ts 


ANIMAL H 
Clans A Thora en, LOB. 
tr ae : 
« MbAray 


Claas. ANUTAL Te Use : a: Johna, 


Miller an 


mr. 


Leahey,” 

‘Class. Il; welaen, Mora; Gentleman; 
Corn: oy ACTRRIOLOGY 82 
~~ Claes I: Johna, 


Seas Hi, Asplund; Johnson; Roxburgh; 
‘Class i: Wallace: 


BIOCHEMISTRY 
Class 11: Misa Edgar and Sins Farnalls, 


equal, 
CHEMISTRY 1 
Class 11; Bdgar; Wilson. 

Class Itt: Goodall; Hunter and McBeath |. 
and Syrotuck, equal; McIntyre; Holmes; 
McFall; Thomsen. : 
HEMISTRY 4 

Class I: Mail. 

CHEMISTRY. 87 

Clasa I: Devlin, 

Clase Il; MecAra. 

Class UI: Malaher; 
Howe: Thomson, L. 8B. 

CHEMISTRY 58 

Class I: Cook. 

Clase Yi: Anderson. 

Clase II: Bedford. 

DAIRYING 1 

Class I: McGregor. 

Class Il: Foster and Walker, equal; Car- 
Iyle: Young; Little; Allen... 


,DAIRYING 61 
Class 1: 


Class IE: Malaher; Kelly; Lewis and Me- 
Ara and Wallace, equal; Bedfor 


DAIRYING 53 
Clase I: Johns; Cormack, 
Class Il: Mossman. 


DAIRYING 584 


Thompson, N. G.; 


—— 
Class 1: Johns. 
Class 11: Cormack; Howe. 
ENGLISH 3 
Class If: Manson; Asplund and Ander- 
son and Phillips, equal: Harper. 
Clase II: Johneon and Kelley, equal, 


English and Morrison and Prior and Robin- 
son, equal; Keer; McFall and Thomson, 
equal; MeIntyre. 
ENGLISH 1 
Clase II: Young. 
Class II: Edgar and Little and Carlyle, 


equal; Shearer, Misa; McBeath; Roxburgh 
and Allen, equal; Kindt. 
ENGLISH 54 <* 
Class Ii: Johns and Mail, * eaual: Cor- 


mack; Devlin and Gentleman and Howe and 
Kelly and Leahey and Lewis and McAra 
and Malsher and Mawdsiey and Mossman 
and Thomas and Thdmpson, eyual. 
ENGLISH 59 
Class UI: Smith. 
ENTOMOLOGY 1 (B.3.A. 
Olaaa Il: McFall; Robinson; Prior; 
son; Harper. 
ENTOMOLOGY 1 (B.Sc.) 
Clase 1; Sohne; Anderson and Carfyle, 
equal: McGregor; Yow 
Class I: Little; Allen: Walker. 
Clare Hi: Foster. 
ENTOMOLOGY 51 
Class II: Hunter; Revell. 
ENTOMOLOGY 62 
Class 1: Mail. 
Clase I: McGregor. 


F. H. 1 
Class Il: McLaughlin; Walker; Carlyle; 
Allen; Little; Foster; Young. 


F. HL 4 
Clase I: Asplund. 
Class Il: Morrison; Keer; Prior; Robin- 
aon; Phillips. 
H. 806 


Class I: Manson; Clarke, 
Class Il: Anderson; English; Revell. 
Class IIE: Johnson. 
F. H. 51 
Clasa I: Johne; Grindley. 
Class II: Gentleman; Cook; Leahey; Cor- 


mack; Richert; Malaher; Miller. 


Man- 


Class Hl: McAra; Lewis; Howe; Thom- 
son; Wallace. 

‘. hi 54 

Class I: ndley. 

Glass II: nn: English and Malaher, 
equal; Leahey and Smith, equal; Thomson, 
L. B.; Richert and Thompson, N. G.; Lewis; 
Gentieman. ue 

F. H. 62 . 

Glass I: Grindley; Clarke; Johns and 


Lewis, equal; Malaher; Smith; Mail. 
Class II: Cormack and Thomas, 
Richert; Thomson ; Mossman. 
F. H. 101 
Class I: Ficht. 
Class If: Smith. 


F, 
I: Huskine. 


F. H, 129 
Class I; Malloch; Huskina. 
Class II: Brown and Martin, equal. 
HISTORY OF AGRICULTURE 1 
Class Il: MeLaughlin; McBeath and- Mac- 
Gregor and Young, equal; Carlyle; Allen. 
Class II: Edgar; Foster and Little, equal; 
Walker, 
HISTORY OF AGRICULTURE ‘61 
Class TT: Grindley and Johns, equal; Mail; 


equal; 


: H. 111 
Class 


Thompson; Lewis; Malaher; Cormack; 
Gentleman and Leahey and Wallace, equal; 
enley. 
“Glass Ill: . Howe and MecAra, equal; 
Thompson, N. G.; Richert. 
HORTICULTURE 2 
Class II: MeGregor: Walker; Young; 


Allen and Carlyle and Little, equal; Foster. 
HORTICULTURE 61 , 
Class I: Asplund; Thomson and Keer, 
equal; Johnson; Robinson. 
ss If: Prior; Manson; Morriaon and 
English, equal; Phillips; Harper; Anderson. 
HORTICULTURE 52 | 
Class I: Miller; Mossman. 
Class Et: Mail. 
HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 31 
Class II: Miss Shearer. 
HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 87 
Class II: Edgar, Mies; Miss Farnalls. 
HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS 58 
Class II: Misa Edgar; Misa Farnalls. 
Clase Tl: Misa Clatton. 
HOUSEHOLD ECONOMICS a3 
Claas a Mies Redig ell, 
HOUSEHOLD FéonoMics 86 
Class I: 


ae Farnalis, 
Clase I: Mise, ae and Miss Clutton. 
Cluss_ TI: Miss Edgar and Misa Farnalls, 


equal, Miss Clutton. 
MATHEMATICS 1 
Clase 17: Edgar; Miss Shearer: McBeath. 
Class Ill: Halmes; Goodall; Kindt. 


MATHEMATICS 61 - 


Class II: ey. ; 
Class WI: Mawedaler Lewis; Mossman. 
PHYSICS 1A (LECTURE) 
Ciass I: oars 
Clase If: McBeath; Edgar; Miss Shearer, 
Class Til: Holmes; McAra;*Harper. 2. 
PHYSICS 1 4) 
Clasa It: Goodall; Miss Shearer; Rdgar:, 
McVeigh; MeBeath. 
Class. LT: Holmes. 
POLITICAL ECONOMY 10 
Class I: Grind 
Clase If: Smit! th 
POLITICAL ECONOM MY 7 


Class UU: Hunter; Gentleman? * eanson: 
English; Lewia and Revell, equa}; Malaher; 
Thomson Johnson. 

jase Tit: 1 Howe; McIntyre; Kindt. 

CAL ECONOMY 7a 
Class Johne; Smith. 
mots i: Grindley; Miller; Wallace: Cor- | 
Class T1f: Tho: in Richert. 

Class T2: Asplund: Robinson; Morrison: 


Glass Ii]: Kee?; MeFall:and. McIntyre and 
Phillips, equal: Phomeon: Prior. 


meniee Tl: Anderson; etarke: Bedtord; | 
vt 
apa. it: Achnson; Manson; Roxburgh; 
Pavell {ports m 
Class f Grind 
3 , Mamdsiey pRichert ; Mossman. 


4 


SOILS 
* Oleas 1: Webt and W 3s 
Glass ti: ae se 


ond McGregor 


. al: Enalis! Prior, ual: Bed- 
ford and Has a ieee Keer: Anderson, 
"ver SCHENCE at 
Cliee Tr Devin and > eawals 
sO. : 
as ‘It: “Howe; MeAra: and “Lanher, 
: 200L0GY 1 
oes ¥ Mail 


Clas t 


Goch: Leahey: Bestth; : Hunter: 


ue si ilgon: aii } 


edt dead 


a FRIDAY, MAY 15. 1925, 
FACULTY 0 OF LAW 


“pus. 
Clase 1: Saticier; Bryan and Jarieron, 


md | eget 
Class. If: Campbell; Butchart:: Mitvain. 


Primrose and | Simmons, ual: omson 
Newson; Day; Mahatty; MeCorry; Mia 
Hainon ‘and Brown, equal: grass Clarke, 
Lyneh-Staunton and Barclay, equal; Short 
and. Baker and Mra. Fitsimon and Herbert, 
equal; MacMillan snd Gele, equal. 

acne Iii: © Bramley-Moore -and- Jones, 


i Kirby and Harrison, equal: Lefsrud; 
fa “and Wright, equal; O’Brien. and Cross, 
EB, equal; Macdonald; Mise Fagan anj 
Gross, equal; Williamson. 

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 


Clase I: Baucier; Butehart and. Jamieson 
equal; Bryan and Milvain, equal; Campbejj 
and Mahaffy, equal. 

“Clase Il: Simmons; Macdonald and Now. 
son, equal; Pritrose and. Thomson, equal; 
Brown and McCorry, equal; Clarke and 
Wright, equal; Lynch-Staunton: Bramley. 
Moore; O'Brien; Day: Gerber; Herbert anj 

Rudd, equal; Gale and Mra. Fitsimon and ; 
Short, equal: Gaunt and- Kirby snd Baker, 
equal; Harrison and MaecMillan, equal; 
Jones, 

Clase NY; Barclay and Leferad and Crogs, 


E., equal; Gross: Miss Fagan and William. 
son, equal; Lessard. 
CONTRACTS. 


Class I; Campbell; Johnson. 


Class WU: Wilson: Wyman; Misa Hamon 
and Cairns, equal; Henderson; Mitchell and 
Bloor, saual: Roas; Tavender ; Marshall; 
Bright and Davies, equal. 

Class II: Cromarty; Hyndman. 

CRIMINAL LAW 

Class I: Johnaon. 

Clasa Il: Campbell; Wilsog, and Wyman, 
equal; Bloor and Miss Ham§n and Taven. 


der, equal; Henderson and Mitchell, equal: 
Bright; Cairns and Marshall, equal; Davies: 
romarty; Ross. 
Class 11: Hyndman: Gerber. 


DOMESTIC RELATIONS 


Class 1: Saucier; Jamieson; Bryan; 
Brown. 
Class II: Butchart; Campbell and Ma. 


vain, equal; Lynch- Staunton; McCorry and 
Clarke, equal; Bramley-Moore and MacMil. 
lan, equal; Rudd; Newson; Gaunt and Prim. 
rose and ‘Gale, equal: Day; Mahaffy; ar. 
clay and O’Brien, equal; Wright and Miss 
Fagan and Bimmans, equal. 

Clase Ill: Kirby; Gerber and Mrs. Fit. 
aimon and Thomson, equal; Harrison; 
Short; Baker; Lefsrud; Jones and Gross, 
equal; Cross, T., and Lessard, equal. — 

EQUITY 1 
Class I: Saucier; Clarke; Milvain; Camp- 
bell; Gaunt. 

Class I: Jamieson; MacMillan and Kirby, 
equal; McCorry: Herbert; Lynch-Staunton 
and Mra, Fitsimon, equal; Wright; Primrose: 
Villiameon and Newson, equal; Thomson; 

Grosa; Crosa, 

Clasa Ill: Macdonald; Harrison; Gerber. 

EQUITY 2 

Class I: Butchart; Bryan; Brown. 

Class Il: Mahaffy; Jones; Day and Bar. 
clay, equal; Rudd; Short; Gale; Baker; 
Bramley-Moore; Simmons. 

Class IiI: O’Brien; Miss Fagan; Leferud. 


EVIDENCE 2 
Class 1: Butchart; Bryan. 
Class JI: Brown; Mahaffy; Bramley. 


Moore; Barclay; Gale; Simmons and Day, 
canal: Short; Miss Fagan: Baker; Rudd. 
Clasa TIT: O’Brien; Jones; Lefsrud. 


JURISPRUDENCE 
Class I: Saucier; Newson; Campbell; 
Bryan. 

Class II: O’Brien; Mahaffy; Jamieson and 
Milvain, equal; Gaunt; Butchart; Lynch- 
Staunton; Rudd; Brown; McCorry; Jones and 
Simmons, equal; Gale; Day; Clarke and 
Mise Fegan and Gerber, equal. 

Class JII: MacMillan; Barclay and Thom- 
son, equal; Bramley-Moore and Primrose, 
equal; Baker and Mrs. Fitsimon and Mac- 
donald and Wright, equal: Lefsrud; Grosa; 
Cross, T.; Harrison: 

PRACTICE 1 

Clasa JI: Jamieson; Saucier; 
Herbert; McCorry; Campbel). 

Class Til: Newson; Lynch-Staunton; 
Primrose; Wright; Kirby; Macdonald; 
Gaunt; MaeMillan; Clarke; Gross; William- 


Milvain; 


son and Gerber, equal; Thomson:' 
4 PRACTICE 2 
lass II: Butchart; Mahaffy; O’Brien: 


Bryan; Day; Gale; Barclay. 

Class It: Bramley-Moore and Rudd, 
equal; Brown; Lefsrud; Baker; Simmons; 
Short; Jones; Misa Fagan. 1 


PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW 

Clasa JI: Milvain; Saucier; Brown and 
Gampbell and Jamieson and McCorry, ecual; 
Herbert and Newson, equal; Baker; Ma- 

rs 

Clase II: Clarke and Lefsrud, equal; Gale 
and Thomson, equal; Bryan and Harrison 
and Jones and Rudd, equal; Barclay; Gaunt 
and Lynch-Staunton, equal; Mrs. Fitsimon; 
Kirby; Bramley-Moore; Butchart: Day and 
Short, equal; Grosa; Primrose. . 

Clase III: Macdonald; Cross, E., and Ger- 
ber, equal; Fagan and 0° Brien, equal; Sim- 
mons; MacMillan: and Cross, T. equal: Wil- 
liamson; Lessard; Wright. 


PROPERTY 1 

Class I: Campbell. 

Class Il: Cairns and Johnson, equal; Hes- 
derson; Wyman; Btight; Miss Hamon; 
Mitchell and Rosa, equal; Tavender andj 
Wilson, equal; Bloor. 

Class IIT: Marshall; Cromarty; Davies and 
Hyndman, equal. 

REAL PROPERTY 2 : 
Saucier: 


Class I: Clarke; McCorry; 
Jamieson, . 

Class Il: Kirby; Milvain and Campbell, 
equal;.Gaunt; Wright; Newson; Thomson. 
MacMillan; Lynch-Staunton. 

Claas It. Mrs. Fitsimon; Gerber; Prin: 
rose: Cross, E.; Macdonald; 


Williamson: | 

Herbert: Gross. . 4 
REAL PROPERTY 3 

Class I. Uryan; Butchart. j 
Glase1l. Mahaffy; Jones; Brown; Ait 
mons; Barclay; Short; Day; Rudd; Baker 
Clase Il: Bramley-Moore; Lefsrud; Gale; 
O'Brien and Miss Fagan, equal. ] 


SALES 
Class 1: Saucler; Campbell end Jamiesos, 
equal; Bryan and ‘Butch: art, equal 4 

Clase IT: Brown and-Mahaffy,. equal: Her- 
bert;. Lynch-Stauttot ; Macdonald; Sim- 
mona; Day and Primrose. and Milvain 

edual; McCorry; Neweon; Clarke; Wright: 
Ruad “and O’Brien and Fitsimon, equal; Bar! 
elay and Gaunt, equal. 

Class Tit: Lefsrud and Bramley-Moor 
equal; Crose, E., and Thomson, equal; Gel 
and Baker end Short and "MacMillan, equals 
Harrison; Misa: Fagan; Jones: Grose « 
Lesuard and Kirby, equal; Williamson and 
Gerber, eaual; Croas, T. 

SURETIES 

Claas I: Jamieson; Brown and Sauciet: 

equal; Butchart and Bryan and Campbell 
equal. 


News jewson, equal 
equal; "Baker 
eq val. 


Class Il: Gate; Barclay; Thomeon: Mit 


Fagan; Gross and Kirby, .equal; Jones! 
Crass, B., and eon, equal; Lefsrud: 
| William eon. 


TORTS 1 
Olass I: Jolson; Campbell. ~ 
"Glass If: Miss: Hamon:. Mitchell; 
gon and Wyman, equal: Cairns: 
Bloor and Davies, equal; Cromarty; 
shall: Tay nar Wilson 5 Ross. 


Benders 
Bright} 
Mare 


« TORTS 2 ‘ 
cia I: Baudier: Jamieson; Camypbel 


ir and Bryan, equal. 

Stave “its MecCorry;. Lynch-Btaunter 
Butchart and Simmons, equal; Clarke # H 
Gaunt aud. "Mahafty,. equal; MacMillan 
Newson and W t equal: Mra. Fitsimot; 


‘amon, equal; 


Tkovich; Day and Miss: i 
vain and Th ase equal; Jones; Gale #0 
O'Brien aad equal; Brarley-Moot, 
and Kirby, ane ‘rimrose. 
A A Beat Wha: 
“ equal: Misa Fast! 
Cross, E.: Baker: ‘Oroas, ke gad Gross 
‘og 


ena 1 Peta re Leo ariel 
one: 
Dey) Gale: Mise Fagan and. BS equtl 


¢ 
relay, Su, Bag, Dramlen-Meore 


bd hi aati Ae a 
iors Th: ‘Marshall; inher Mins Hane 


‘ab ‘Hyndmaa, equal 
HMTORY sf 
Qiass I Ge 
ni Ee ue Weens and Milly 


Literary Supplement 


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Literary Supplement 


Published by The Gateway, University of Alberta 


Editor: Kenneth MacKenzie. 


BALLADE OF THE MALCONTENTS 


Oh, the heat is stifling in Grub Street today. 
Not a breath stirs, not the tiniest sigh. 
The dust lies thick on the ledgers grey. 
We scribble on, my partner and | 
And try to forget the heat that’s nigh, 
Searing our souls. Figures begin to blur. 
We look through the window and see the stir 
Of men on the docks and can hear the hail 
Of a swarthy bo’s‘un, sea-wanderer— 
Brother, she leaves in an hour—let’s sail! 


The old man'll curse in the same old way; 
Let him curse, we'll be out under the sky. 
Dear God! The clear sky—why, it's blue today! 
There are winds out there where the sea-gulls 
fly, 
North winds that smell of the sea and the high 
Lone peaks of the Arctic; winds that purr 
And whistle through the cordage; that bestir 
And set your heartstrings singing to the gale— 
Comrade, we'll go. There's naught now to deter; 
Brother, she leaves in an hour—-let’s sail! 


She's bound for the tropics and East, they say; 
Would you like to see gibbering Malays vie 
With bags of copra and coral gay 
To urge yon swart bo's'un and us to buy? 
Or lie under palms where the south winds sigh 
Old tales that the creaming breakers aver, 
Old tales that savor of incense and myrhh. 
Here’s money at hand, we'll not scruple or fail, 
We'll act now or never, nor stop to demur. 
Brother, she leaves in an hour—let’s sail! 


ENVOI 


Oh, it’s come at last, the old urge to spur 

On to new places that free men prefer. 
We'll set our feet on the ancient trail; 

Brother, she leaves in an hour—let’s sail! 


—j.D.C. 


FLIRTATION 


How many times each man or maid 
Has lightly vowed, “'] love you.” 

A hundred dates with as many mates, 
And each time the same, “‘! love you.” 


And so the dangerous game goes on. 

If a heart breaks one deftly screens it; 
For the saddest fact of each playful pact 
Is that one of them always means it. 


—Emily Horricks. 


Associate Editor: Rache Dickson. 


THE LETTERS OF WILLIAM COWPER 
By J. E. H. 


A passing suggestion made in the lecture room 
has led me to browse around in the letters of 
William Cowper. It is, as one biographer has said, 
a collection of letters seldom taken from the shelf. 
I may never have opened the volume but for the 
recommendation of it I had heard, for some vague 
impressions regarding Cowper's hypochondria were 
sufficient to have prejudiced me against his letters 
as most probably being somewhat gloomy and dull. 
Yet, on reflection, it is evident that the writer of 
John Gilpin must have possessed a vein of humour 
making him worthy of better acquaintance. That 
such is the case will be perceived even on a cursory 
reading of his letters. True, some bear the impress 
of his melancholy, but others are written in a lively 
spirit, while most of them exhibit a quiet, playful 
humour that is quite delightful. 

Unworldly recluse though he was, the gentle 
poet could clearly see and thoroughly enjoy the 
amusing or the ridiculous wherever he met it. The 
effectiveness with which he could narrate what de- 
lighted his sense of humour can only be appreciated 
as the letters are read. On occasion, he can take 
a particular theme and discourse in serio-comic 
style upon it. His disquisition on the morality and 
convenience of face painting is an example, and one 
to be read by all who are of the gentler sex. He 
is happiest, however, in recounting amusing inci- 
dents of village life, or of his own experiences; as 
when he tells ‘how the beadle thrashed the thief, 
the constable the beadle, and the lady the con- 
stable, and how the thief was the only person con- 
cerned who suffered nothing’; or of the tea-urn 
that must be replaced because ‘‘a parson once, as 
he walked across the parlour, pushed it down with 
his belly, and it never perfectly recovered itself’; 
and of the beggar who was given some vermicelli 
soup, ladled it awhile, and then returned it saying, 
“Lam a poor man it is true, and | am very hungry; 
but yet, | cannot eat broth with maggots in it.” Or 
there is the doubtful compliment accompanying a 
request made of himself to write some verses to be 
annexed to the annually published bill of mortality 
of a nearby town. Cowper suggested a local verse- 
maker as being a suitable person. Back came the 
reply, ‘Alas! sir, | have heretofore borrowed help 
from him, but he is a gentleman of so much read- 
ing. that the people of our town cannot understand 

im,”’ 

Only occasionally are there references to the 
world beyond the secluded village life. Dr. Samuel 
Johnston is sometimes mentioned. Before this auto- 
crat of the literary world Cowper's gentle spirit 
shrinks, for while he grants a request that his first 
publication be shown to the Doctor, he adds, 


PAGE TWO 


“though I well know that one of his pointed sar- 
casms, if he should be displeased, would soon find 
its way into all companies, and spoil the sale."” At 
another time the poet censures the severity of Dr. 
Johnson's criticism of Milton, saying, ‘the Doctor, 
in order, I suppose, to convince his royal patron of 
the sincerity of his monarchial principles, has be- 
laboured that great poet’s character with the most 
industrious cruelty."” Then follows a warm criti- 
cism of the critic, concluding with the delightful 
exclamation, “Oh! I could thrash his old jacket till 
[ made his pension jingle in his pockets.”’ 

The value of the letters as affording a study in 
prose style is not inconsiderable. They display a 
winsome simplicity and easy grace that is well worth 
careful study. 

But their real charm consists in the delightful 
delineation of the poet’s own world and in those 
self-revealing qualities whereby we get to know and 
to love the man. Of course, his was a small world, 
and its concerns mere trivialities, but Cowper had 
the power, to a remarkable degree, of investing 
trivial things with interest when he described them. 
He himself is revealed as a man to be compassion- 
ated, not as a weak man so much as a man com- 
passed by weaknesses. But he is also seen as a 
man to be admired and loved. To be admired for 
the quality of sterling sincerity that shines through 
these unaffected letters, and to be loved for that 
tender humanity which was poured forth in his 
poetry as a balm for men, and is so intimately re- 
vealed in him by his letters. 

The book is not one to be read by those whose 
movie-stimulated taste demands a succession of 
thrills for leisure moments, but for such as can 
enjoy a quiet stroll through a literary bypath there 
is both rest and entertainment in its pages. 


“AIN’T NATURE GRAND!” 


“Well, we are here at last," | said to my friend, 
as | beached the canoes. ‘My, it is a wonderful 
place—the clear air, the quiet solitude; to quote an 
ancient saying, ‘Ain't nature grand.” 

The tent was soon erected, and before sundown 
six beautiful eggs were frying over the fire and 
were casting their aroma to the wilds. All was 
peaceful, blissful, enjoyable. We were in bed by 
nine, as we were tired from the day's long paddling. 
We floated off into dreamland, and left the peace- 
ful world bathed in a smoky haze. 

At ten my slumbers were rudely rent by a yell 
from my friend. 

‘Hey! What is the matter?" [ cried. 

“One of those’ damned slimy garter snakes 
crawled in bed to keep me warm,” came my 
friend’s angry reply. 

“Shucks, you will never be a woodm———" [| 
broke short. 

‘What's wrong with you?" my friend asked. 

‘Dashed spider nearly bit a leg off me,” I said. 

‘Hal hal’? came a derisive laugh. ‘Go to sleep, 
you big he-man.” 

The next interruption came at an unearthly hour 
in the morning. | was shaken to sensibility by my 
friend. The world was swept by a howling wind 
which drove hissing rain into my face. 


THE GATEWAY 


et A vahREUE eg 


“What's wrong?” I screeched. 

“Oh, nothing——nothing——only the tent has gone!" 

“By Jove, it has!" said IJ, in amazement, 
*Where?”’ 

My friend’s silence was eloquent. 
volumes. 

“Oh, well,” | said, in an attempt to ‘laugh it 
eff, “we can weather the night and go home to- 
morrow. Too bad, in a way.” 

“Yes, and we walk!” came the reply. 

“Walk?” said I; ‘“‘walk when we can ride? No, 
sir; not for me!” 

“Well, a tree has just blown over on the canoe, 
and if you can find enough of it to float a small 
feather | hail you as the eighth wonder. Person- 
ally, I’m walking. Oh, ain't nature grand!" 


—R. W. Pingle. 


It spoke 


KATE 
or 
The Girl Who Would Not Read the Text. 


Her parents had sent httle Kate 

To be an undergraduate. 

"Twould be, they said, their proudest day 

When she came home with her B.A. 

All the first term she did her best; 

She polished off the Christmas test, 

And in the spring she got a pass, 

In fact she took a second class. 

But when the child became a Soph., 

Her record went distinctly off. 

It shocked her people when they heard 

That Kate had barely got a third. 

“Come, Ma,” said Kate, “no need to fear. 

“I'll have no tests in my third year— 

“Only term essays. There’s no trick 

“To them, except to choose and pick 

“And cobble passages together. 

“Tt really makes no difference whether 

“You ever read the text or not: 

“The reference books are a short cut.” 

The subject which was first assigned 

Was “Wordsworth on the Poct’s Mind.” 

Of course Kate found her stuff for it 

In histories of English Lit. 

Above these books upon a ledge 

And perilously near the edge 

There stood a most majestic bard 

Made of white plaster, smooth and hard. 

(You know whose bust it is I mean— 

The author of Hvangeline). 

The day before her work was due 

Poor Kate was in an awful stew. 

All through the different books she races, 

And thrusts them back into their places. 

Others, but not. she herself, 

Saw the bust tremble on its shelf. 

Tt trembled on the brink and fell: 

There was a crash and then one yell. 

Tt. had struck Kate upon the head, 

Which being shingled. she was dead. 

The tired janitors said “Blast her!” 

As they swept Kate up with the plaster. 
—R. K. G. 


re ps | 


GREENWOOD 


Greenwood is a farming community in Ontario. 
Go one hundred miles north of Ottawa, and jog 
over west about twelve miles and you're there. As 
far as I know, it’s always been there, the same 
farmhouses along the road, the saw-mill with the 
ever decreasing skidway that never decreased, the 
cheese factory with a thin, anaemic white wisp of 
smoke from its chimney. Quiet, sunshiny, conser- 
vative Greenwood. Maybe you would call it a 
hamlet. A hamlet suggests uncomfortable Sunday 
clothes, and a church bell, and gossipy old women, 
and an old maid school teacher, and a log black- 
smith shop. Yes, | think Greenwood would be a 
hamlet. 

The social, business and religious center was at 
the cross-roads. On one corner was Greer's store, 
and on another corner the church. Opposite the 
church was the hotel, and opposite the hotel was 
the carpenter's house. So you see, there was al- 
ways something going on at the cross-roads. It 
was called ‘“Greer’s Corner.” 


At one time the hotel was a fine place. The 
proprietor, Bill Green, was a long, lean, erratic 
lrishman. But then, anybody of importance in 
Greenwood was Irish. Bill Green was the best- 
liked man in the settlement. Well, maybe not any 
better liked than Syd Greer, the storekeeper, but 
then, they were two different types of men. Greer 
was the talker, while Bill was the doer. [t was Bill 
who drove the wild bronchos that were killed by 
the train. It was Greer who was elected Reeve of 
the council. It would be bill who would get hil- 
ariously drunk, treat all the neighbours to “‘Segrum,” 
turn hand-springs in the middle of the road, or 
wrestle Tom Clarke, the wrestler. [t would be 
Greer who would play the fiddle while Bill danced, 
and referee the wrestling match while Bill wrestled. 
Greer didn’t get drunk often, because he said he 
had a poor stomach. He also had a wife, and it 
was common knowledge that since the time he had 
tried to kiss the hired girl, Lizzie had put her foot 
down on “‘Segrum.’’ But then, who had seen Greer 
try to kiss the girl? No, no, that was just hearsay. 
Greer was too nice a man to try to kiss that giddy 
fool even if he was drunk. But even if it was true, 
which nobody would ever think of believing, he 
was a darn nice man, anyway. Yes, sir, the most 
cbliging man in the country! And the straightest 
man, tool Nobody could every say a word about 
Syd Greer. 

As soon as evening fell all the men of the dis- 
trict for two miles around would have a plug of 
tobacco to buy at the store. About half-past eight 
they'd all be there. There'd be Tom Clarke, John 
Clarke, Bill Clarke and Jack Clarke; Bill McMunn 
aid Dick McMunn and Long Tom Jackson and 
Willie John Jackson; and Jim Leach and Miles 
Clarke and Ned Leach; and Alfie, Baxter, Leslie, 
Dellie and Joe Davis. There'd be Willie Salter 
and Albert Risto and Tommie Hewitt and Billie 
Riley and Phil Hayes. They'd be seated on nail 
kegs along the wall back of the stove, on the 
counter, or if space was scarce, on the floor. Greer’s 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE THREE 


place was left vacant till he came in from doing the 
chores. Greer was always late with the chores. He 
sat on the floor with his back against the counter, 
so that the light couldn't shine in his eyes, and close 
to the match box. When he sat down everybody 
felt settled. They'd rather listen to him tell lies 
than to all the philosophy of the Greeks. 

Sunday was the only day of the week that the 
store was not in vogue. On Sunday afternoon it 
was the custom to attend church. Everybody went 
early. The men sat over on the hotel veranda 
smoking and talking about the cows and the pigs 
and the latest murder in Chicago. They sweated 
in their celluloid collars and stiff shirts and felt 
respectable. ‘Well, Chicago must be a terrible 
place. But that’s those city people for you. Did 
you ever hear Joe Davis tell what he saw in Ottawa 
when he was down to the Fair? No? Well—but 
that’s a long story, and besides, there's the minister. 
It's time to go into church.” 

Inside the church everybody tried to get into 
the back seats, but they weren't always successful, 
so that the late arrivals would have to sit up among 
the women and the girls. If they grinned modestly 
enough and so acknowledged that the joke was on 
them, nobody paid much attention to them, but 
some of the fellows were “stuck up,’’ and went up 
guite unconcernedly and didn't pay tribute to the 
back benches. Of course, some people like to be 
conspicuous. They were the ones, too, who sang 
the hymns with the women. A “he-man” of the 
back row was too manly and too sensible to make 
a ‘holy show” of himself, but those fellows in front 
had no shame. Well, they liked that kind of thing. 
As the Reverend Mr. Orr twined and untwined his 
fingers and slowly but surely got Daniel through 
the wild animal act and the fish story, attention 
shifted from the “‘sissies’’ to the flies on Tom 
Clarke’s bald head or Anabel Leach’s lovely profile. 
Baxter Davis drew a horse’s head on the back of 
the seat in front of him, and Long Tom Jackson 
ran his fingers back and forth through his whiskers 
as if he were looking for something. Mrs. Greer’s 
ostrich feather quivered and shivered as if it had 
the chills. That feather always made me nervous. 
Phil Hayes sat still and listened very attentively to 
Mr. Orr, and never heard a word the good man 
said. He was stone deaf. For an hour and a half 
he would sit there without a chew of tobacco. How 
he did it was a wonder to the countryside and a 
tribute to his self-control. Mr. Orr went on to the 
bitter end. The collection was taken, the psalms 
were sung, the prayers for rain were said, the King 
was blessed and we were blessed and the minister 
was blessed. He never omitted anything. But all 
things will pass, and finally church was over, and 
everybody crowded outside. They stood around 
for awhile as if they had awakened from chloro- 
form, and then straggled off down the road and 
home to sleep. 

Old Greenwood! Bill Green is gone, Syd Greer 
is dead, Anabel Leach is married and has a family. 
Mr. Orr is playing another circuit, and Tom Clarke 
was killed three years ago; Billie Sullivan vanished 
in a shell-burst on the Somme; Johnnie Green went 
out in front at Lens and never came back, and 


acm et ee mm) on PEW O49 1) te eee 


PAGE FOUR 


many more of the boys of the back benches are 
lying in the cemeteries around Amiens and Ypres 
and Paschendael. There must be more grey- 
headed old people in Greenwood now. I had a 
letter from there two weeks ago, and it said: “We 
have a new teacher. She's boarding at Hewitt’s, 
and Herb Jackson has quite a crush on her. They 
say that Lucy Maddox has a diamond. I haven't 
seen your brother Billie for a long time. He's work- 
ing in Pembroke now. Beyond that, there’s no 
news. Greenwood is just about the same. Write 


soon.” —J. M. Sweeney. 


TO THE MAN IN THE MOON 
(Cupid's Prayer on behalf of the Hired Man.) 


Old Man in the Moon, oh hear, list’ here, list’ here: 
On yellow pumpkins, looking at the ground 

These two do sit, and she’s his dearest dear. 

And he would change her name to Lizzie Hound. 
His pumpkin is to hers the nearest near; 

He's gulping, but he has the queerest fear. 

Come down and help him make the proper sound. 


Old Man in the Moon, stop picking prickly sticks, 
And slide you down a moon beam here to him. 
His heart is full of tickling-ickly pricks 

As when I first hurled my gold spear through him. 
It stops and starts with sticking sickly kicks— 

A bad attack of frisking fickly hicks— 


And all because of this dream near to him. 


I've whispered in his ear, but I despair, 

And I'm afraid they'll catch their deaths of cold. 

You've often helped me change two to a pair— 

Please hearten him before they both grow old. 

You'll free me from another worldly care— 

And you can have the pumpkins. Hear my prayer— 

Ooooo never mind——he's just this minute told! 
—Campbell Hargrave. 


DEATH IN EXILE 


If thou hast loved me lay me not among 

The hillsides withered grasses on the barren 
Outskirts of some quiet western town——ah, no! 
Alive | loved the fireside warmth, the pulse 
Of swarming life—the evening's cheerful lights, 
The morning footsteps and the haunts of men. 
Dead must | lie forgotten and alone? 

There is a land | know where they that sleep 
Are blessed with flowers—wide walks—tall trees 
And hushed voices. Where quiet and tender 
Reticence cradles the beloved bed, 

And little children learn in kindly truth 

The certain end of man and fear it not. 

If there | am when that last call | hear, 

] shall not dream, nor toss my restless soul 

To lie among the loved—at that will take 
From Death's remoteness the uncertain ache, 
Will give to Life a vista so profound, 

Serene and good, that to be underground 

Will seem a gentle end to unquiet care, 

And I, all sorrow lose, when | am there. 


—L. M. H. 


THE GATEWAY 
-— 


BEFORE THE STORM 


Hush, hark! A stillness in the air! 

The spirit of the storm is lying low. 

The sky is very dark, and, over there, 
The poplars, bending, stagger to and fro. 


] hear the waves come lapping on the shore, 
And whispering to the sand, with voices low, 

Yet strong, as if some inner,waiting power 

Had feared, its strength before the storm to show. 


A breath of wind sweeps, sighing, through the trees, 
The giants, bending lower, shake their heads. 

We hear the stir and rustle of the leaves 

And watch the wood-folk scamper to their beds. 


A monster, creeping on us from the west, 
Drags at his side, the spirit of the storm, 
Approaches nearer now, with fiery breath, 

A ghastly, grayish, ghostly, cringing form. 
The lightning flashes swift across the sky, 
The thunder echoes wildly to and fro. 

The monster lifts the shrieking storm on high, 
And flings him, headlong, to the earth below. 


—Mollie Grant. 


My friend, you've come a weary way 

Along that dusty road. 

Rest an hour in these trees till the heat of the day 
Is gone, then strap on your load. 


You say you must go on, or night 

Will find you walking still; 

That you will be far from the farmer's light 
When darkness falls on the hill. 


But, man, you'll plod on slowly now. 

You're tired, you've travelled long. 

See the ripples divide from that trailing bough? 
Go bathe, and rest, and rise strong. 


You'll walk with downcast burning eyes. 

You'll see no bird or flower. 

You have eaten with me. Now, my friend, be wise, 
And rest in my field an hour. 


—Campbell Hargrave. 


THE REASON 


““Why are you here?” he asked. 
*‘Why have you come far from that older land 
“To this, the gateway of the unknown North?” 


Then answered |: “‘Let me a question ask, 

“Ere | my answer give, 

“That it when given may appear more clear. 

“Why are the forests here? the plains and moun- 

tains? 

“The rivers and the blue lakes and the snows? 

“The sunshine and the pale aurora and the dew? 

“The cultivated fields? the towns and villages? 

“The dumb beasts, and the other men, and you? 

“All these and I are here to play a part— 

“To help fulfil the whole which He has planned.”’ 

Then he replied, “ "Tis good. J] understand.” 
—C. C. G. 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE FIVE 


A GOWN FOR STEPHANIE 


“Hey, Bill ! There was a series of violent 
thumps from the other stairway and Ted Bremner 
slid onto me across the floor of the rotunda. ‘You 
are on the costumes committee, aren't you?” 


“Yes.” | took a deep breath, pausing in my 
dash to the third floor. | was ten minutes late for 
a test. 


“Well, the gown for Stephanie won't do. Some- 
body has to go down town with her this afternoon 
to pick out another. There’s a dress rehearsal at 
7:30, and we can’t spare anyone else. It’s up to 

ou. 

4 “Go to the deuce!” I remarked from the land- 
ing, and at the first floor | heard him call after 
nen 

“She'll be waiting here for you at 12:30." 

There wasn’t time to be outraged; my mind for 
the rest of the hour was fully occupied. For the 
first time in history Dr. Malcolm and | agreed as to 
what a test in Math. 40 ought to consist of. | 
plunged in delightedly, and at the end of the period, 
being last to hand in my paper, | stayed to ask a 
question or two. e was unusually friendly, and 
[ went slowly downstairs expanding with dignity 
and radiating my satisfaction with the world. It 
was not until my feet touched those square red tiles 
azain that I remembered either Ted or Stephanie. 

A cold wave broke over my satisfaction. Then 
a hot wave followed! The colossal nerve! Go 
shopping with a strange woman—not while |'m con- 
scious! Well, she wasn’t quite strange. You couldn't 
call a girl a stranger when you’d been making love 
to her strenuously every night for a week. But on 
the other hand, what else could you call a girl 
whose name you'd never heard? Stephanie—her 
name in the play——was all | knew her by. Fool 
name for a girl, and it suited her—all eyes and 
meek as Moses. She looked eternally scared to 
death. That was her réle, of course, but it didn’t 
take with me. | like ’em friendly and fulla pep. 

Dress-hunting, and with that dame! Was it a 
frame-up? I had paused involuntarily as | reached 
the bottom and remembered, and in that instant | 
saw her standing by one of the big pillars. She 
was looking straight at me, half-smiling and wait- 
ing. Oh, ass! ass! Why hadn't | come down the 
hack stairs! A quick glance around showed me 
that there wasn't a soul in sight—-it was noon—and 
I had to pass her to get to the door. There was 
nothing else for it. 

As I approached, she threw me a helpless smile 
that made me sick. 

“Teddy Bremner asked me to wait here for you.” 

“Did he?” I returned icily. 

“He said you'd be able to come with me this 
afternoon to get another dress for the play.” 

“What's wrong with the one you've got?” 

“It’s too big, and it doesn’t suit me—why didn’t 
the committee at least ask me when they ordered 
ii? Besides, it’s pale blue and my dress has to be 
white. Where did you get it?” 

“T didn’t get it. Harry Baker ordered them all. 
Get him and take him shopping with you. It'll 
serve him right for trying to run things. He should 


have put some girls on this committee. Go to him,”’ 

“LT don't know him Her voice quavered. 

“And the dress rehearsal is tonight! Well, I'm 
afraid you'll have to wear the one you've got.” =| 
was quite firm. There were voices down the hall, 
and I was anxious to make my get-away. 

The big brown eyes flashed. ‘I won't wear it, 
and that’s final. If you don't want to come, why 
don't you say so?” 

“Tm very sorry: ** but there I stopped. The 
“voices” appeared through an archway—it was 
Lucile with her new sheik, over whom we had the 
row. She looked straight at me and through me— 
the peroxide jade—never a sign of recognition— 
and then turned again to that hee-hawing jackass. 
{ looked at Stephanie, and continued loud enough 
for whom it might concern to hear. “I’m very 
sorry—er—that I've kept you waiting a moment. 
Let’s go to the Tuck and eat while we talk it over.” 

She shook her head. “Thank you. I've had 
lunch,” 

“But | haven't, you see. Come, you can have 
coffee, anyway.’ I smiled my fascinatingest, and 
then, under Lucile’s eyes, 1 appropriated Stephanie 
and marched her off. 

She was more bewildered than ever as she sat 
across the table, and the big brown eyes studied 
me over her coffee cup. There was no conversa- 
tion. Stephanie was the dumbest of the dumb, and 
I was too mad to make funny remarks. That miser- 
able young would-be vamp! It was all her fault in 
the first place! I had gone into this play only be- 
cause she was in it, and when she dropped me for 
this Valentino she quit the play. I cursed my luck 
a hundred times, but it would have been the joke 
of the season if | had stopped too. And besides, | 
wouldn't give her the satisfaction. On Lucile’s ac- 
count I was developing dramatic talent, to the con- 
sternation of our whole corridor, and because she 
had cut me in the hall today [ was Tucking with 
a strange (and uninteresting) woman, and was 
planning to help her pick out a new gown! 

Oh, well, | could be decent, anyway. It isn’t 
doing the gallant to invite a young lady to lunch and 
then not speak to her during the ceremony. | 
cast a quick glance at her, and at the hurt expres- 
sion on her face | kicked myself. 1 must say some- 
thing——anything. Besides, she might stil] be dumb 
with amazement—my sudden thaw must have been 
funny to her. I laughed to myself at the thought, 
and Stephanie searched my face suddenly. Darn 
those ‘‘eyes like a startled fawn’! No wonder a 
fellow can’t like her when she turns on him a 
battery like that. 

“T suppose,” [ said with an effort at frankness, 
“that you're asking yourself why I changed my 
mind so suddenly. It was conscience. I’m subject 
to sudden attacks—~not really serious, you 
know ” 

A slight smile. ‘‘] thought it must be. 
mean you are really coming with me?” 

“Can't you do it yourself?” 

“Oh, I couldn't ** A helpless gesture. 

“Why don’t you get a girl to go with you? | 
couldn't tell you what looks well on you 


Do you 


PAGE SIX 


“Oh, it isn't for that, at all. [t's to—to interview 
the management—and—and everything you know. 
I really couldn't * 

“If Harry Baker were only here. This is his 
mess! But I know he’s doing the wild man this 
afternoon getting properties in order.” 

I spent a vain minute trying to think of some- 
body else to wish her onto, and then finished with 
a smile and an inward curse. “Oh, | suppose I'll 
have to do it.” 

There was nothing to reply to this, and she re- 
mained silent, looking out the window. There were 
little points of fire in her eyes. 

“So you don't look pretty in pale blue.” 

“Oh, frightful—you've no ideal Besides, the 
thing doesn't fit. It bags at the shoulders and it's 
too long altogether - 

“You can’t alter it?” 

“It’s a rented gown.” 

“Hmmm! And even Taylor's wouldn't stand for 
that. Well, we'll have to see what we can do. We'll 
go back to Taylor’s first and then to the Acme— 
they are the stores that usually are good to rent us 
cestumes. If we can’t get anything there we'll have 
to try the other places, but I'm doubtful . 

Stephanie looked so relieved it was amusing. The 
weighty burden of interviewing a manager or two 
had been lifted from her and her gratitude to her 
great, big, strong wonderful rescuer (that’s me!) 
fairly radiated in her face. And they say that our 
grandfathers fell for the clinging vines! Nix. 
Nething doing. Still, you could see their viewpoint. 
Stephanie wasn't half bad for a kid—except for 
those galvanic eyes. They were too big, but a rich 
brown like her nair. And they certainly let you 
know all she was thinking. 

“Thank you. I'm glad. 1 really am frightened 
of business men, and I'd look so guilty when | 
approached them they'd think | wanted to steal it.” 

“What will you do if we can’t get one?” 

“T don’t know yet. One thing | won't do, and 
that is wear that pale-blue-Harry-Baker-affair.”’ 

I laughed. ‘Well, come on, then, and let’s get 
it over with. You pick out the dress you want, and 
I'll handle the ‘powers that be’. Only we're in for 
some fun, [| think.” 

It was a fine February afternoon just after a fresh 
fall of snow. The world was white, the sky was 
brilliant blue and there was just wind enough to 
put a crisp tang in the air. We decided to walk 
over the bridge and down town——the cars would 
be stuffy, and it wasn't so far. The bridge looked 
inviting when we stepped on, and unconsciously | 
swung into my stride. The vista of black girders, 
the white crunching snow, the exhilaration of the 
air—one could almost taste it. 1 breathed deeply 
and remembered with satisfaction my Math. 40 test. 
It was a ‘‘first’’ easy—well, [| needed it. 

A little voice beside me said, “‘Plee-ase.”” Poor 
Stephanie had been nearly running to keep up. 

** *Smatter ? Am I going too fast?” 

“A—a Jittle.” 
| apologized, and she looked up at me, laughing. 
‘You are a speed model, anyway. | used to think 
I could hike.’”” The eyes were still too much in 
evidence, but no longer frightened. On the con- 


THE GATEWAY 


trary, far from it-—such thankfulness, such perfect 
trust and confidence! | felt rather as if a stray dog 
Lad adopted me. Only Stephanie was quite a like- 
able child. Fresh, probably. She looked now as 
she leaned against the railing out of breath, not far 
from pretty. Red hat and red mouth; brown fur, 
brown hair, brown eyes. She could smile with those 
eyes when she wanted to. That was a nice pink 
in her cheeks, too, from the wind or the walk, or 
both. Lucile’s cheeks—but I banished the thought 
of Lucile. I would forget her, and that would 
bother her more than anything else I could do now. 
So we leaned over the railing and watched the coal- 
steighs far below crawling along the roads over the 
ice. They were only specks on the whiteness. 

“You're fresh this year, aren't you?" I asked. 

“The idea!’ Indignation registered in the glow- 
ing orbs. “I'm a Senior.” 

“You haven't been here for four years. Why, 
I never saw you before. Where have you been 
hiding all my life " 

“Probably not—you wouldn't have noticed me 
if you had. But I haven't been hiding. I’ve been 
doing my best for four years to get discovered, 
and failing miserably.” 

She wasn’t so young as [ had thought. There 
was a harder tone in her voice, and her eyes wore 
some of the old look. 

“But who are your friends?” 

“Pembina is full of them.” 

“Where do you go for your fun?” 

“Oh, teas, and movies with the girls and the 
symphonies and all the music I can hear. Hikes, 
too, sometimes.” 

“Do you skate?” 

“I can skate * guardedly. 

“Do you dance?” 

“T can dance 

“You can, but you don't.” 

An express train tore by overhead, filling all the 
bridge with its thunder so that I missed her answer. 

“Don’ t you like to dance?” 

“Yes.” 

"Why don't you come to some of the Saturday 
Nights?” 

“Let's change the subject.” 

“No, I want to know.” 

“Then I'll tell you. And I'll tell you because 
the Beau Brummel of Varsity is exactly the last 
person I should tell—the last person who could pos- 
sibly understand. 1 don't go to sleighing parties 
or skating parties, or house parties or card parties, 
or theatre parties or club parties, or Varsity affairs 
of any kind merely because | haven’t the necessary 
man. That's all. I have decent clothes, but no 
place to wear them. Not being a girl, you can't 
imagine what a difference that little detail makes.” 

“Why don't you come to the Saturday Nights and 
meet some? You can come ‘stag’ to those.” 

‘| did go. 1 went to two of them and spent two 
evenings of agony. Good floor, good music, my 
prettiest, newest dress, and not one soul asked me 
to dance. Not one! I don’t think anyone even saw 
me—~you didn’t, as you said. To sit there helpless 
-—unnoticed, undesired, and feel the wallflower 
uumbness stifling you, crushing out of you every 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE SEVEN 


spark of gaiety, every desire to be pleasing and 
attractive. Oh, | could have screamed. And it 
h. ppened twice; I think | was brave to put myself 
through it a second time. Only once in both 
evenings did somebody notice and bring up a man 
for me to dance with—it might have been you for 
ali | know—(and she threw me a glance | couldn't 
fathom )——but when we were introduced he turned 
teil and fled. 1] was only a Freshette then, but | 
wish I could forget it.” 

“Well, you know lots of boys now. You meet 
them on the campus, in the halls, at lectures———" 


‘No, I merely see them there.” 

“Don't you speak to them?” 

“Any that I know.” 

‘But the others—the ones you'd like to know?" 

“Certainly not.” 

“Well, there you are. They can’t speak first, 
and if you won't, there's no help for it.”’ 

“Oh,” said Stephanie, “I don’t expect you to 
understand. I merely wanted to demonstrate my 
oratory. 1 was so unusual to have a man to talk 
to. . 

“Tl think it is your own fault if you haven’t boy 
fiends. You speak to strange girls quickly enough. 
And boys are often quite as sensitive as you are.” 

“It probably is my own fault. But I can’t help 
it. Lf the only way | can get into the fun is by 
tying to make up with strange men, then _ 
She threw up her hands. ‘“‘I don’t like them any- 
way—strange men. And it’s unbearable to have 
them think that your friendliest overtures are ‘fish- 
ing’. TF can’t smile at them. You don't understand. 
You can go where you like, when you like, and pay 
your own way. I can’t.” 

We were getting down town now, so I let it go 
st that. Her attitude was quite wrong; it made 
me impatient. 1 was sorry for her, but it was her 
cwn fault. And | wasn’t quixotic enough to go 
a-tilting at the social conventions. We dismissed 
the subject and spoke of commonplaces. Stephanie, 
with the excitement of expressing her pent-up feel- 
ings, had become thoroughly pretty. Her brown 
eyes had been glowing coals, now they flashed and 
leaped like a flame at some of my saallies. She 
returned them too, sometimes with a pointedness 
that wasn't so slow, and we both laughed together. 
Certainly Stephanie was improving, whereas Lucile 
1 To the shades, you departed ghost! You're 
dead! 

The shopping district arrived. There was nothing 
to be had in Taylor's or the Acme, and we pondered 
the question of where next. There was Kenwood’s 
and the “Elite” and Betty's Bonnet Shop, where 
many things other than hats were sold, and Jenkins 
Brothers, and McCallum’s, and half a dozen others 
whose names | had never heard of. The simplest 
way was to take as we came to them. 

Kenwood’s, the first one, was a rough experience. 
“A pretty white dress,” Stephanie asked for. Silk? 
Preferably. For herself? Yes. A heavy rack of 
gowns was swung round, pretty things, what there 
was of them. There were only half a dozen white 
ones-——~only one her size. 


“Umm. 1 don't think so. Too elaborate,”” said 
Stephanie. “Heavy satin brocade isn’t my type, 
nor the type of my role in the play.” 

“For a play?” inquired the salesgirl. 

“Yes,"’ | answered innocently. 

“Then you didn't mean to buy the gown?" 

We were both dumb, and Stephanie floundered 
out with, “No. We only wanted to-—-er—that is— 
to rent it, you know.” 

The salesgirl replaced her white satin on the rack. 
“Certainly not,” with supreme disdain. ‘We don't 
do that sort of thing.”’ 

Out in the open we surveyed each other half- 
laughing, half-indignant. 

“T’'m so sorry, Mr.—Mr. 

Billy.” 

“It was my fault. You were supposed to do the 
explaining, and only to the manager. {[ shouldn't 
have said anything.” 

“IT should have cut in sooner. 
too, But we're still alive. 
here?” 

It was rather a lark, though. Stephanie was en- 
joying it. I wondered vaguely as we crossed the 
street if women always enjoyed their shopping. 
They were eternally at it, anyway. 

Our next trial was better. At least, by keeping 
mum we escaped being forcibly ejected. ‘A white 
gown for Madam?”’ and after a hasty glance at 
Stephanie— ‘Sorry, we have nothing your size.” 

Then another attempt as futile. ‘‘White? No, 
nothing at all in white. It is quite out this season, 
and the pale shades are the rage. Here's some- 
thing sweet in a very pale blue——” 

“It must be white,” said Stephanie firmly, and 
the girl smiled so sympathetically at both of us. 

“Oh, yes, of course, a little wedding dress——”’ 

We didn’t look at each other for five minutes, 
and | didn't open my mouth. Why, I don’t know, 
I would have teased another girl about it, but | 
didn’t tease Stephanie. 

In the next place she tried on a dress, and | 
was left seated under a palm tree. Presently two 
girls | knew came into the shop, and | slunk hastily 
into a corner. A “‘Ladies’ Wear’ was a queer place 
for Bill McLennan, and [| didn’t care to make ex- 
planations. The clerk came up and touched my 
arm. 

“You wife is ready now, please.” 

It was a fluffy affair, with ribbons dangling all 
over. [| couldn't help admiring. Her eyes twinkled 
impishly, and with her feet still in their heavy 
galoshes——a ludricous contrast to the fly-away dress 
-~she swept me a mocking curtesy. 

I whistled. Jt was a snappy little dress all right, 
and yet—how can a fellow tell why a girl's clothes 
don’t suit? It was white, it looked nice on her, 
and yet | wasn't satisfied. She didn’t look the 
part. This was a flapper dress, and after all 
Stephanie wasn’t a flapper. She surveyed me 
quizzically. 

“Well, how do I look?” 


A ticklish situation! How was I to know what 
she wanted me to answer! I took my courage in 
both hands, and began slowly— 


I was my fault 
Where do we go from 


PAGE EIGHT 


“You look swell—-to me—but 

“Shall we get it?’’ she challenged. 

““No—I don’t think so.”’ 

Stephanie laughed, and I joined in rather feebly. 

“Do you know why you don't like it?” 

I gave up. | had an idea, but if I tried to ex- 
press it, I’d make a bigger fool of myself than ever. 

“Who says a man hasn't an instinct for woman's 
clothes. He knows, but he knows not how he 
knows. Of course it wouldn't do. It’s a ducky 
thing, and | couldn't resist trying iton, But it looks 
more like a modern débutante than the soulful 
maiden in the last act. We'll have to try again.” 

And in spite of the clerk’s expostulations, she 
left it there, regretfully. 

There was only one white one at the next place. 
It was a cheap-looking thing, elaborated with big 
pearls. Stephanie waved it away. 

“It looks like a Russian wedding at Mundare.” 

But 1 wasn’t used to shopping. “Oh, Lord, 
Stephanie, we'll never get a white one, and the 
stores are full of colors. Can't we take a green one 
or a yellow, or a purple? They're pretty, and they 
look the right thing. I'm sure you'd look nice in 
one of those purple ones.” 

“That's orchid,” she answered, ‘‘and I look in 
orchid still worse than in pale blue, if possible. 
Come on. There's only one more store, and what 
U shall do if I can’t get it there I don’t know.” 

“But you must be dead tired. [ am, and hungry 
as a wolf. Let's eat." 


“Business first. We'll eat when we've looked 
over Blantyre’s and console ourselves in defeat.”’ 

It was dark long since, and near closing-time. We 
entered the brilliant store with its thick carpets and 
rich furnishings, and as the heavy door swung 
noiselessly back a Grand Duchess in black silk sailed 
down upon us smiling. 


“I have the very frock you want,"’ she confided. 
‘A delicate little thing just made for you,”’ and she 
steamed away again, leaving us seated for a blessed 
moment. When she returned Stephanie rose with a 
little cry and held out her hands. ‘‘There it is! 
The dress of my dreams!" 

“Didn't 1 know it?”’ cooed the Duchess. 
I've been actually saving it for you. It’s a sample, 
just in last week, but a small size. 1 know it will 
fit you though——just try it on a minute. Come.” 


“Why, 


It was exactly the thing, even | could see that. 
When Stephanie had slipped into it, the Duchess 
called me into the fitting-room and left us a moment 
alone. 

I couldn't describe the dress on my life, but I'll 
never forget the picture of her standing there. Soft 
filmy white, it clung to her slender body and floated 
out—-the dew-drops sparkling on the deep scallops 
made me think of Easter lilies. Yet it wasn't the 
dress I saw; it was Stephanie, and I saw her as I'd 
never seen a girl before. She was transfigured some- 
how—! can't explain it. Only suddenly, by the 
queer quietness that stole over me, | knew that my 
fate was sealed. The brown eyes were tired now, 
the little red mouth smiled wistfully. In all my life 
| had never seen anything so utterly, appealingly 
sweet. 


THE GATEWAY 


“Come,” she said at last. ‘‘How do you like it?" 

“If you could see yourself!" 

“There are three full-length mirrors in this cubby- 
hole. But I'd rather have you tell me—Billy— 
what do I look like?” 

The nearness of her set my pulses pounding, and 
yet she seemed aloof, and vaguely unreal. [ an. 
swered her unsteadily: 

“Like Faith—the substance of things hoped for, 
the evidence of things not seen.” 

That broke the spell, of course. It was a darn 
fool thing to say, and yet | meant it. And | think 
she understood, too, although she replied: 

“Are you rehearsing the last act? Or merely im. 
provising? Because ['m too tired to listen.”’ 

The Duchess, coming in, interrupted us. 

“Isn't she sweet? The dress was born for her. 
You're in luck, too, that I can let you have it for 
$55. Rather long, though." 

‘Must be a last year’s gown," | ventured to cover 
my confusion. The Duchess smiled on me pity- 
ingly. 

‘Here, my dear, I'll just snip these stitches 

“Oh, no, no, no—don’t cut it!’ Stephanie 
glanced around in wild dismay. 

“Don’t you want the dress? It’s perfect on you!" 

‘Oh, I love it, but don’t make any alterations, 
please. I can't buy it.” 

The Duchess was alarmed at the girl's sudden 
panic. ‘The price is nothing for such a little gem. 
Come, I'll make it fifty, for it will never look half 
as well on anyone else.” 

“Oh, but I couldn't buy it even for less than 
that," said poor Stephanie, and looked, as she had 
promised, so guilty and embarrassed that the 
Duchess’ eyes narrowed and her lips drew into a 
thin line. 

“Then if you can’t buy a dress, why do you come 
in here and try one on?” 

] saw it was time to interpose. 
the manager?”’ I asked. 

“Il am the manager and proprietor too. What 
do you want?"’, and from the fierceness of her tone 
I expected to hear the Duchess order, ‘Off with his 
head.” 

I explained, rather weakly, that we wanted to 
borrow the dress for one evening, to be worn on 
the stage for about twenty minutes and returned at 
once, unsoiled. In acknowledgment we would print 
on our programs, “Costumes by—and Blantyre’s.” 
We would pay a deposit and would give any small 
consideration they might require. 

The Duchess snorted scornfully. “Rent out our 
costumes! This isn’t a masquerade parlor or a 
second-hand store.” 

“There are plenty of respectable firms in town 
that are glad to oblige us in this way.” 

“Not Blantyre’s. We haven't come down to that 
yet. Come, young lady, I'll take the dress, please.” 

It flicked poor Stephanie like a lash, and it made 
me see red in a moment. 

“Wait a moment.” The Duchess turned to me. 
and I measured her as for a tackle. There wasn't 
time to think. ‘Your price is fifty dollars, nothing 
less?" 


” 


**May I speak to 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE NINE 


“Not a cent.” 

“Will you take a check?” 

She gave me a swift and withering survey, and 
her eye lingered appraisingly on the cut of my over- 
coat. “Yes,” at last. “TH take a check.” 

“Then have her make the alterations, Stephanie.” 

| wrote out the check, mechanically. Stephanie 
came out of the fitting-room in her own clothes. 

“Billy, what are you doing? The Dramat can’t 
possibly pay that for a costume!” 

“I’m buying this dress, not the Dramat.”’ 

“No, you're not. You mustn't. I won't wear it.”’ 

“Yes, you will. I’m buying it for the Dramat, 
Lut I expect,’’ | continued lying glibly, ‘‘to be almost 
entirely——er—reimbursed.” 

“Nonsense. They can’t afford it.”’ 

“Why, sure, Stephanie. I know there is twenty 
dollars to spare, and the proceeds of the play, and 
if it goes over well, we'll be putting it on a second 
night.” 

“Are you sure?” 

“Of course. Besides they told us to get a dress, 
and gave us carte blanche as to ways and means. 
And we had to have that very one, didn’t we? 
Now, let’s eat. You are done in, and in hour or so 
we have a dress rehearsal.” 

So we ate, and rested. Shopping? [t was more 
strenuous than basketball. Stephanie was exhausted, 
and [ let her eat in peace, feasting my eyes and 
making large mental readjustments. Lucile—the 
shallow little upstart! | laughed at myself for 
having been a fool. But this—this was the real 
tuing—the greatest thing in the world. ‘‘Stephanie”’ 
--what a pretty name she had! Those marvellous 
brown eyes lifted and smiled at me, and my heart 
slipped three beats. She fitted her name exactly— 
and then | stopped, feeling foolish. That wasn't 
her name. I had no idea what her name was. 
Probably Susie Smith. 

“Do you know,” I remarked across the table, 
“you might at least tell me what your name is,” 

She looked surprised. “Smith.” 

“And your first name?”’ 

“Is this a joke? ’’—gravely. 

“No, I was wondering, that’s all.” 

“But you have been using it all day— 
Siephanie.”’ 

It was now so late that there was nothing for it 
but a taxi. But what was that in my young life. I 
should worry about expenses—TI was having lots of 
them. It was pitch black outside, and the lights on 
the bridge gleamed in two long rows. 

“Suppose they won't cash the check’’—-in sudden 
dismay. 

“Oh, the check will go through all right,’’ I re- 
assured her. So it would—with $4.60 to spare. 
It merely meant adding another fifty to my college 
debt, and thank the gods, it was my last year. 

“It's a dream of a dress,’’ she sighed rapturously, 
nestling back in the cushions. “‘It’s just what I've 
always longed for—a white georgette for dances— 
or—or-——a play like this—or—or * 

“Or—or—or * Pteased, ‘“‘Or-—what?” and 
when she blushed and didn’t answer, | helped her 
cut. “Or graduation?” 


There was a sudden silence. Then a deep sigh, 
a, d then two warm little hands grabbed mine. 

“Billy,”’ she said enthusiastically, “‘you’re a dear. 
You’re a hero. You deserve the V.C. and the 
S.0.S. and the P.D.Q., and everything else all 
yelled into one. You saved the day most gloriously 
by buying the dress, and now you've solved the 
problem of what to do with it.” 

“Yes?"’ Tinquired. “How come?’ It was rude 
.0 contradict a lady, so I merely listened and slipped 
my arm around her. 

“But oh, how selfish I’ve been. And what a 
little fool. Oh, ['m sorry. Billy, don't you see? 
That dress was predestined for my graduation. Why 
didn’t I think of it before? I can buy it myself. 
It's twice what I ought to pay, but I'll spread my- 
self for once. [Il write home tonight for the money. 
But, oh, how utterly stupid of me! I should have 
been keeping my eye open all the time for a 
graduation dress. And I’m so sorry to have given 
you all this trouble .* 

1 was ashamed of my inner relief. 

“Are you sure you can afford it?” 

“lll have to. I can’t graduate in peace without 
itnow. To think of giving it up again , 

“Then you'll wear it to the Graduation Dance?" 

“Oh, I won't be going -* 

“You are going-—with me.” 

She laughed. “What makes you think so?” 

“You will go with me, won't you, Stephanie?” 

“Pd love to. You'll never know how much 

There was a long silence. The lights in the val- 
ley below twinkled out in the blackness. 1 leaned 
over her. 

“Stephanie, how long would the dress last?”’ 

“Don't worry. I'll wear it out before it’s old- 
fashioned.” 

“Rut how long?” 

“Oh, a couple of years, maybe.” 

I did some frantic multiplying with interest at 
4 per cent., and finally gave it up. No use hoping. 

“Well, never mind, then, honey, wear it out and 
we'll buy another when we need it.” 

Stephanie looked up at me and laughed, and that 
was too much. [ swept her into my arms, and kiss- 
ed the little red mouth—the best I knew how. She 
said nothing, and made no resistance, but her silence 


gave consent. 
—l. M.D. 


we 


Oh wind, you're wild, oh wind, you're free— 
Oh wind, strong wind, oh carry me 

To a far away hill where I may see 

The winter prairie where you blow. 

Oh wind, free wind, oh | would be 

Where you play with the newly-fallen snow, 

And it whispers, whispers when you go; 

Where the eastern hills’ and the sky's soft glow 

Is golden, mauve and silvery, 

When the shadows are long, when the sun falls low. 


——Campbell Hargrave. 


PAGE TEN THE GATEWAY 


AS IT WAS AND IS— 


Zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom, 
The muffled cornets blow. 
The saxaphones are squealing 
And the fiddler plies his bow. 
The drums are tapping at our hearts, 
The trombones boldly bleat, 
As we dance and prance and jiggle 
On our jazz-bewildered feet. 


Trip, trip, trip, trip 
The light fantastic toe 

Across and down and in and out 
We jostle to and fro. 

The bright lights glitter in our eyes, 
We feel the ancient urge, 

As the flood of dancers eddies 


In an endless tidal surge. 


Tap, tap, tap, tap, 
The music in my head 
Has dazed me into dreaming, 
Ancient dreams of days long dead. 
We are out beneath the starry sky, 
A thousand ages back, 
And in answer to the music 
Loudly howls the savage pack. 


Boom, boom, boom, boom, 
The tom-tom’s rolling note 
Is echoed through the forest 
From each hoarse barbaric throat. 
And our painted limbs are gleaming 
In the camp-fire’s ruddy light, 
As we leap and twist and wriggle 
On this ancient festive night. 


Zoom, zoom, zoom, zoom, 
The forest vision fades. 

The men resume their evening suits, 
The girls their silk brocades. 

But still beneath their modern dress 
As in the days of yore, 

They dance and prance and jiggle 
On the highly polished floor. 


—R. V. Clark. 


EQUINE SYMPATHY 


For weeks I’ve seen you standing there 
Upon the lot beside the jail, 

Your body bent beyond repair, 

Tagged with a sign that says, “For Sale.” 


And though I toil upon the road 
From early morn till evening late, 
When passing [ forget my load 
Awhile, and ponder on your fate. 


Your owner drove all summer long; 
He “pounded you upon the tail”’; 

And sometimes on the “‘Danger’’ curves 
He even rode you on the rail. 


No hour too late, no mud too deep, 

He used a sort of dev'lish skill 

When you presumed the grade too steep, 
And coaxed you till you climbed the hill. 


But winter joy rides give no thrill; 
Your price will pay the grocer’s bill; 
And so he placed you on the square 
To catch the eye of suckers there. 


On other lots on other streets 

Your brothers and your cousins stand; 
My horse sense tells me its the same 
In every city in the land. 


No roof to shield you from the storm, 
No exercise to keep you warm—~ 

| know exactly how you feel— 

A second-hand automobile! 


—C. CG. 
WOLF HENRY 


Wolf Henry lived in a tumble-down shack, at 
the foot of the clay cut-banks of Six Mile Coulee. 
The shack was built of rough, unpainted boards, 
and the roof was of poles covered with a 
layer of sods. Time, and the action of the 
weather, had worn away the soil from between 
the little squares of sod, so that from inside one 
could look up and catch little glimpses of the sky 
here and there between the chinks. In summer this 
sod roof was a veritable garden, where wild daisies, 
harebells and golden rod bloomed in their season. 
In winter a thick covering of snow shut out the 
glimmer of the stars, and shut in the warmth of the 
rusty iron stove. 

The furnishings of the shack were scanty and 
none too clean. A stove, a rough deal table, a home- 
made barrel-chair and bedstead, were all the com- 
forts the single room could boast. One tiny window 
let in a filtering of light, greyed by passing through 
the dust and cobwebs of years. The door had a 
heavy bolt. 

What Henry’s other name was no one knew, and 
he himself had long since forgotten. He had been 
a trapper in the early days, and had come down to 
Trowbridge from the mountains of British Colum- 
bia. Here he had found the shack, built and aban- 
doned by some early “‘squatter,”’ and had settled 
down in it. In the spring and summer he worked 
as gardener and general handy-man in the town of 
Trowbridge. Early every morning he harnessed 
his old mare to his cart and set off for town. The 
cart was bright red; upon it he had painted crude 
pictures of grinning timber wolves; and it was from 
this that he derived his nickname of ‘‘Wolf.” 

“Ye see,’ he would reply in a hoarse whisper, 
when asked the meaning of these pictures, “‘it's to 
make "em think I like ’em. That's the way [ fool 
em. 
,|Here he always became greatly excited, and 
his voice would become more and more shrill. 

“When they see the pictures, it throws them off 
my trail. But they'll get me—they'll find me out 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


in the end—they’'ll smell my blood, d’ye see——" 

“Who, Henry?" one would enquire, astonished 
at the old man’s agitation. ‘‘Who are they?” 

“The wolves—the timber wolves. They're after 
me, and they'll get me——in the end they'll get me.” 

Suddenly a look of intense cunning would come 
over his face. “‘But I like them. Why should I 
have their pictures on my cart if I was afeart of 
‘em?’ and turning on his heel, he would go back 
to his work, muttering and cursing to himself. 

What terrible experience in the wilds lay behind 
this frenzy of Henry's we never knew. Pressed 
for the reason why ‘“‘they” should want to “get” 
him, he always became so excited and incoherent 
that no one could understand him. After such 
periods of excitement he would not appear in town 
for days, and then suddenly, early one morning we 
would hear his tuneless little whistle in the garden, 
and looking out would see him bending over the 
flower beds or trimming the grass borders. 

One morning late in September, Henry drove his 
cart up the lane, hastily tied his horse beneath the 
great maple, and hurried to the open kitchen door. 
The maid, who was preparing breakfast, appeared 
at his impatient knock. 

‘I must see the Missus,”’ he said. 

“You can’t see her now, Henry, she’s having 
breakfast.” 

“IT must see the Missus,”’ repeated Henry dog- 
gedly. 

Something about the aspect of the old man 
frightened the maid. There was a wild gleam in 
the bloodshot eyes, and the lips beneath the drag- 
gled grey moustache twitched uncontrollably. 

““[ must see the Missus, girl,” he repeated, and 
the frightened maid disappeared into the dining- 
room. A moment later the door opened, and the 
“Missus’’ came into the kitchen. 

“What is it, Henry?’’ she asked, a note of im- 
patience in her voice. 

Henry's grimy hand beckoned her nearer to the 
screen door. He glanced nervously over his should- 
er, and then lowering his voice to a whisper, said: 
“They've come, Missus.”’ 

“Who have come, Henry?” 

“They've come," he repeated. 
last night.” 

His eyes looked past her; he saw what he de- 
scribed. 

“I was lyin’ in bed, when suddenly I heard a 
snufflin’ under the door, and the pad of their feet. 
An’ then I knew. The door was barred, like al- 
ways. Then I heard a scufflin’ at the window, but 
they couldn’t reach up to it. An’ then there was 
silence—that awful silence—you know, Missus’ ‘— 
(the bloodshot eyes turned toward her again, for 
a moment, and then stared intently into space)— 
“that silence when you know there's Somethin’ near 
you, waitin’ for you, and you don’t know where to 
look for it. An’ then, suddenly, I knew they were 
lookin’ at me—I could feel their eyes burning into 
me—an' I looked up an’ saw them lookin’ through 
the crannies in the roof—yellow eyes like fire, an’ 
then green. I[ looked at them; | couldn't move, 
couldn’t do nothin’ but stare into them awful eyes. 


“They found me 


PAGE ELEVEN 


An’ then suddenly they began to scratch and claw 
at the roof. I jumped up. I yelled and screamed to 
scare ‘em, but they kept right on scratching. | 
grabbed by gun and fired. I fired again. Then I 
heard an awful cry, and a thud. I loaded and 
fired again and again. I guess I was kinda crazy, 
Missus’"—~(the bleared eyes regarded her apolo- 
getically for a moment)—'‘‘an’ then [ didn't hear 
any sounds—just silence—-but I knew that they 
had gone and taken the dead one with them.” 


“Did you kill one> How do you know you 
killed one?’’ demanded the Missus, astonished. 


“Because of the cry— it was the death-cry, ye see. 
An’ [ know they took him away with them, because 
they weren't no sign of him this mornin’ when I 
looked. But now, ye see, Missus’’-—the frenzied 
look came into his eyes, and again the apprehensive 
glance over his shoulder—'‘they’ve found me, an’ 
they'll be bound to git me now I’ve killed another of 
‘em. They'll follow me an’ follow me, an’ some 
day they'll git me. When I'm not ready for 
em 


The old man was apparently beside himself with 
excitement and fear. His breath came in great 
gasps, and he clutched his throat as though already 
he felt the sharp teeth of his pursuers. |The Missus 
was thoroughly frightened, and like most Western 
women, being frightened, she became angry. 

“Henry! Be quiet! You should be ashamed of 
yourself,” 


Her voice, sharp as a lash, reached even Henry's 
nightmared brain, and did more to quiet him than 
any words of sympathy could have done. It was a 
voice he was accustomed to obey. Slowly he 
straightened up, and a saner light came into his 
eyes. 

“Yes'm. Yes, Missus,’’ he mumbled. 


“Come in here and drink this coffee’’"—the voice 
was milder now. ‘You're simply hungry and over- 
wrought.” 


““Yes'm,” said old Henry. 

That day at noon the Missus spoke to her hus- 
band about the episode. ‘‘Poor old man, it is too 
bad,” she said; “but you should speak to the auth- 
orities about him. He is becoming dangerous. He 
really frightened me this morning, and he would be 
much better where he can be looked after than alone 
in that miserable shack.” 


Her husband agreed, and broached the matter to 
the authorities. But red tape is red tape, and time 
passed. Henry seemed even quieter than usual, and 
came and went regularly in his red cart, but the 
Missus, watching him closely, noticed that he seemed 
apprehensive and ill at ease, and that the fearful 
glance over his shoulder every few moments had 
become habitual. He was as a man haunted by 
some spectre, invisible to others. 


One morning he did not come to work. This 
had happened many times in the past, but this 
morning the Missus, remembering his strange be- 
havior of late, was concerned about him. As the 
morning progressed, she became so obsessed with 
the idea that something had happened to him that 
her husband consented to drive down to the shack 


PAGE TWELVE 


in the afternoon to see if all was well with the old 
man. 

It was early evening before Alec Shaw and a 
friend drove down Six Mile Coulee road. Above, 
on the prairie, the light lingered, but down in the 
valley the autumn evening was already closing in, 
and the tall trees threw a heavy shadow on the road. 
The dead leaves under the horses feet made a dry 
rustling sound. 

‘Just a fancy of my wife's,” said Shaw. ‘‘The 
old man has been very queer lately, and she is 
afraid that something has happened to him. It's 
probably nothing at all. He may be getting his 
potatoes in or some such thing. But she was so 
worried that I said I'd come. It’s a nice time for 
a drive, anyway.” 

As they neared Wolf Henry’s shack the howl of 
a dog, long-drawn and mournful, drifted across the 
valley. 

“Funny time to howl—there’s no moon,” com- 
mented Shaw lazily. Then as a thought struck him 
—‘‘By Jove, that sounds like Shep, Henry’s old 
mongrel.” 

They drove on. Rounding a turn in the road the 
little shack with its tumble-down barn, black against 
the shadows, stood before them. There was no light 
in the window, no sign of life about the place. Again 
from the shack they heard the howl of a dog, which 
as they approached the closed door, changed to 
a furious barking. Shaw spoke to the dog. Re- 
cognizing his voice, the barking changed to a whine, 
and the dog could be heard scratching at the door. 
Pushing against the door they found it barred. 

“Old man’s gone off and left the dog inside, 
eh?” suggested Laurie. 


‘Perhaps,’ answered Shaw, “‘but the door is 
barred from the inside, and there is no other.” 


They walked around the house and looked in the 
window, but the dust and darkness inside prevented 
them from distinguishing anything. They shouted 
and beat upon the door. No sound but the re- 
newed whining and scratching of the dog. The 
heavy door resisted all their efforts to open it, and 
at last, thoroughly alarmed, they broke the window, 
and Shaw crawled through, 


He had barely reached the floor before he felt 
the dog rubbing against his legs, and a cold nose 
was thrust against his hand, sending an involuntary 
shudder over him. He struck a match. In the dim 
light resulting, he looked about him and saw the 
cold stove, the rough chair and the untidy table. 
Across the bed lay Wolf Henry, his head fallen 
back against the wall. The flare of the match died 
out. 


Shaw quickly found a lantern, lit it, and joined 
by his friend examined the room. Wolf Henry was 
dead—dead, in the grim fighting attitude of a man 
who faces his foes for the last time. His rifle lay 
on the floor beside him, where it had fallen from 
his hand. The blankets were thrown back, as 
though, springing from the bed in desperate haste, 
he had flung them from him. A cartridge box, half 
full of shells, lay on the bed beside the old man, 


and a number of empty shells strewed the floor, as 


THE GATEWAY 


though he had Joaded and fired in frantic haste, 
Everything else was as it should be. 

As the two men stood, stunned by the unex- 
pectedness of it all, the memory of his wife's ac- 
count of Henry's wild story swept over Shaw. He 
seemed to see the old man as he stood at the kitchen 
door that morning—his straining eyes and twitch- 
ing lips as he glanced fearfully over his shoulder— 
and fragments of the story came back to him: 

“ ... LT could see them lookin’ through the cran- 
nies of the room—lI screamed and yelled to scare 
"em, but they kept right on scratchin’—I] grabbed 
my gun an’ fired an’ fired—I guess | was kinda 
crazy, Missus-———”’ 

—DMarjorie Sherlock. 


THE YELLOW MASK 
Special Supplement Serial 


Gordon McRosenblatt 
What has gone before: 


“AU is over between us,"’ storms Zuyder Van 
Zuyderdam, wealthy stockbroker, when he returns 
unexpectedly from Europe to find his wife, Mar- 
ian, in the arms of his Chinese cook, Wun Lung 
Lo. He hurls a brick he has with him at the cook 
and dashes down to his taxi. ‘‘Drive, drive, drive,” 
he cries, and at break-neck speed hastens to the 
riearest employment agency. 

Meanwhile, beautiful Marcelle Wave, his sister. 
in-law, calls at his house, and finds Wun Lung Lo 
weltering in his life's blood and the folds of the 
library carpet. He is stabbed three times through 
the heart and his throat is cut, but he lives long 
enough to cry “Pung, Chow, and Ma Jongg” be- 
fore he deservedly dies. Police, who have been 
attracted by Marcelle’s screams, arrest her for mur- 
der and parking her car in front of a fireplug. Boss 
Moriarity, corrupt chieftain of the city’s graft-rid- 
den government, is smitten by Marcelle’s pure 
charms. ‘‘Never fear, little lady,” says he, “*Adol- 
phus Moriarity has never yet failed a woman in 
ber hour of need.”’ She repels him, for she loves 
Oscar Von dem Rauchen Verboten Schmalzbad 
und Sauerkohl, scion of an old Winnipeg family. 

Touched to the heart, he stamps off, swearing 
to obtain her release, to lead a better life and to 
divorce his present wife. 


Members of the Alpha Beta Gamma Tong of 
unscrupulous highbinders, whose past district sec- 
retary and Most Exalted Ruler of the Peacock Robe 
and Mystic Realm, the dead Wun Lung Lo had 
been, decide to take a terrible vengeance for his 
death. They suspect the innocent girl because she 
has been known to pour Listerine on her chicken 
chop suey. 

Meanwhile, Boss Moriarity, Zuyder Van Zuyder- 
dam, who has obtained a new cook—Japanese—, 
and Marcelle’s lover (see name above), all work 
frantically for her release. The Alpha Beta Gam- 
mas send her a gorgeous bouquet of roses, impreg- 
nated with a deadly drug, one scent of which is 
fatal. Marcelle Wave spends her first night in 
prison. 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE THIRTEEN 


Now go on with the story: 

Came morning at last, after a night of sighs, and 
as the first roseate bars of the rising sun, gilded 
the wall over her straw stuffed pallet, our heroine 
lifted a tear-stained face that yet bore upon it the 
marks of steadfast courage and resolution to face 
bravely the perils of the day, to look them un- 
flinchingly in the eye. 

Soon came the turnkey bearing on one hand a 
loaded salver, draped with a snowy napkin, which 
covered the meagre prison fare of Boston Baked 
Beans and cocoa. Under the other arm he carried 
a large pasteboard box which at once filled the nar- 
row cell with the fragrance of the sun-kissed 
slopes of the rose-wreathed Pacific coast. 

Marcelle clung to the bars of her cell as the 
gaoler entered with his burdens. Tears of happi- 
ness welled from her eye, as with a radiant face 
she took the box of roses from hisarm. 

“T need not ask,’ she cried in happy confidence 
—little she knew what fate awaited her—‘‘l know 
enly too well that these are sent by Oscar Ernst 
Von dem Rauchen Verboten Schmalzbad und Sauer- 
kohl.” 

“You said a mouthful, lady,”’ returned the man 
of keys, his gruffi old heart warmed by her joy. 
“There's his card in the box.” 

Luxuriating in the knowledge of Oscar E. V. D. 
R. V. S. U. S's constancy and thoughtfulness in her 
awful predicament, Marcelle opened the box and 
shook a dozen long-stemmed American Beauties 
upon the dingy blanket that covered her couch. 

Breakfast went unheeded while she gathered the 
great armful of roses and took a deep ecstatic breath 
with her face buried in the glorious blooms. 

Instantly convlusive shudders racked her slender 
frame and she let the roses cascade in wild con- 
fusion to the floor. A smile of pained and bitter 
disillusion tortured her paling lips while an agon- 
ised whisper reached the gaoler’s ear. “You love 
me not! Oh, Oscar......Ernst......Von.....Dem Rauch...... 
and her life went out as the flame of a candle flick- 
ers away in the blast of the cruel north wind. She 
died. 

No, dammit, let's try again. 

But ere the final spark of life had left, the hardy 
turnkey leaped from her cell to bring his pulmotor 
equipment. With hurried hands and deft, he tried 
to resuscitate her, He slapped her blue-veined 
wrists and pressed her hands and burned a pack- 
age of Old Chum under her nose. Yet, yet all in 
vain, not all his wiles and arts would bring her back 
to life again. Bereft of the love of Oscar Ernst, etc., 
Sauerkraut life was not worth the effort. She died. 

Curse it. This is no good. She's got to live 
twenty chapters yet. 

But! What noise was that? Even as she sway- 
ed she heard the voice of Oscar raised in call a- 
down the corridor. Once more the colour rose to 
ber death-tinged cheeks as the thunder of his man- 
ly feet approached her cell with racing speed. 

“Sweetheart. We have found the guilty wretch 
and you are free again. Come to my arms, my 
dove." The lovers sank into embrace. 

“Y-you llove me yet?’ sobbed the beautiful 
girl, and hung half fainting in his arms. ‘‘K-kiss me 


again.” And as he complied with her request her 
willowy body stiffened in his grasp. The deadly 
poison had done its fatal work. She died. 

The End. 
Note by the Editors. 

Mr. McRosenblatt was asked to write us one 
of those gripping serials for which he is so famous. 
“Art for Art’s sake” has long been his chief tenet, 
and he tells us that the dramatic situation forced 
him to kill the heroine. Circumstances, therefore, 
compel us regretfully to bring this serial to a close. 


PEMBINIGHT 
By W. Beaache 


Once upon a time in a certain university there 
was a little band of happy co-eds who were popu- 
larly referred to as “The Eight Eggs.’” In contrast 
to the eggs served in the university dining halls 
these young ladies were very good. But neverthe- 
less mischievous. They were normal, healthy West- 
ern girls, whose sense of humor was fully developed, 
who believed that the sun never went out of busi- 
ness, and who helped make Varsity life more deli- 
cious for their friends. They studied a little, laugh- 
ed a lot, and got their full share of joy out of playing 
tricks on one another and on the rest of humanity. 
The Eight Eggs were the young ladies who, in their 
Freshmen year, used to snap their garters in class 
to embarrass the bashful young English professor. 

In this same. university there was one known as 
“The Empress’’; the dean of women students; ad- 
viser; mother to the pack. Hers was the unenviable 
duty of “looking after’ the young women in resi- 
dence. The co-eds of Alberta (that was the name 
of the university) came from many distant parts, 
and fond parents needed some assurance that their 
daughters would not be sans a maternal guide in 
the big city of many guiles, where the university 
was planted. The Empress filled the bill to a T. 
She had the years and experience to appreciate 
girlish tendencies and she lacked the years to make 
one old and crabbed. Her sceptre was wieded with 
wisdom and sympathy, and her popularity among 
her charges was eloquent testimony of the success 
of her rule. In fact, the Empress was ‘‘a dear.”’ 
All the girls said so; including the Eight Eggs. “A 
friend to be value and a foe to be feared” was the 
concensus of opinion. And she had no foes. 

The Eight Eggs caused the Empress to lose more 
sleep than any other cave-dwellers in the cliff called 
Pembina. Midnight ‘feeds,’ fire-escape get-aways, 
and clandestine motor car rides were, among other 
things, continually getting the eight into hot water 
with Her Pembinal majesty. But that lady was slow 
to anger, and quick to forget, and her feeling 
toward the mischief-makers was one of fondness 
only. 

On the evening of the Ides of March in the 
seventeenth year of the University, “The Eggs” 
were assembled in the dressing-bedroom-study of 
Fran Williams. The day had been a dull one. 
Very wearying, in fact. Behind the locked door, 
seven of Mr. Players’ choice cigarettes were being 
thoroughly enjoyed. Eleanor MacMillan never 


PAGE QPURTEEN 


smoked. Girls’ lips were never designed to caress 
cigarettes, was her view. 

Many interesting topics, and a few men, had 
been discussed, when Hep Horricks burst forth 
with, “‘Girls, I’ve got an ideal <A real honest-to- 
goodness brain-wavel”’ 

“Get her an ice-bag,’’ was “the Scotchman’s’’ 
suggestion. (“‘The Scotchman’s’’ name was Betty. 
Her parents were McLatchies. ) 

Molly Staunton, in a voice filled with compassion, 
came to her friend's assistance, feeling her pulse 
and quoting, ‘““Despise not the simple-minded. It 
often pays to be dumb.” 

But Hep knew her fry, and, undismayed, fol- 
lowed up her startling statement. 

“If you fellows will show me the courtesy of 
listening-in for a moment, I'll favor you with an 
explanation. My childish brain has planned a plan, 
or, as Riddlehow would say, formulated a project. 
Will you listen, or will you have me publish in The 
Goatway a series of your unsuccessful love affairs?" 

The threat was effective, and the other seven 
wound their kimonas more tightly around them- 
selves and settled down more comfortably on their 
cushions. 

“Shoot!” came the general invitation. 

Hep adjusted herself comfortably on Fran’s bed, 
her legs dangling idly over the edge, a thin wisp 
of smoke ascending from her mouth, and proceeded 
to unfold the big idea. 

“It’s about time we sprung another joke on the 
Empress,” she began. ‘She'll be getting bored, if 
we don’t give her something to worry about soon. 
Wouldn't it be grand to send her on a man-hunt 
in the building?” 

“Sure. This place is just teeming with he-men 
at this hour of the night,"’ remarked Madge Ayles- 
worth, in a tone of regret not entirely feigned. 

Ursula Dean was rude enough to remark, “We 
always thought you were an idiot, Hep, but now 
we know it.” 

“IT'm not,”’ came from the prostrate form on the 
bed. 

“But where do we get the M-A-N?" inquired 
Emily Grant, who was busily engaged at the mirror, 
plucking offending eyebrows. 

“The night-watchman!’’"—from Hep. 

The silence which followed upon her announce- 
ment convinced Hep that her idea had a chance, 
and a grin of satisfaction slowly took possession of 
her always-happy face. But she bided her time. 
Not being of the male species, she liked to be 
coaxed a little. 


Eleanor broke the quiet with, “Sounds as though 
there might be something in it. What's the idea, 
plan or project, if any?” 

The others also expressed interest, so Hep, con- 
tent, sat up on the bed, pulled her knees up under 
her chin, and tightly hugging her legs, told of her 
plan. Her eyes gleamed with mischief and her 
voice had in it a sort of devilish chuckle which soon 
communicated the spirit of the affair to the other 
seven. She proceeded. 

“Well, here goes. The night-watchman will be 
around here on his frist trip in about twenty minutes. 
Four of us can beard him on the top floor and tell 
him that there is some one prowling around down- 


THE GATEWAY 


stairs. Explain to him that we're frightened. Regu- 
lazy ‘agitated girl’ stuff. And ask him if he'll come 
down and investigate. In the meantime the other 
four will go to the Empress’ room and tell her that 
we think there is a man snooping around. She'll 
be all for hot-footing after him. Must protect our 
girls. Are any of you intelligent enough to see day- 
light yet? Or may | now sit back and receive your 
praises?" 

“Hot zigaty! Let's gol’ 

“Stupendous! Staggering! Thrills!" 

“You're nominated for the Men’s House Com. 
mittee right now!” 

These and other similar comments expressed the 
enthusiasm with which the idea was taken up. 
Fran's chamber sounded like a Chinese school-room 
as th Eight Eggs eagerly discussed the working out 
ct the big plan. Who would go here? Who would 
go there? What should they say? It took about 
twenty minutes to get the forces arranged and the 
details agreed upon. 

“We're away, gang. And may Heaven protect 
the innocent. We'll see you in the funnies,"’ was 
the parting remark as four, headed by Emily, went 
towards the Empress’ suite and the rest followed 
Fran in the approach upon the night-watchman. 

Emily’s party found the Empress had just re- 
tired, but she was up-and-at-it as soon as the situ- 
ation was explained to her. 

“A man prowling around here at one o'clock in 
the morning!"" Her indignation was beyond de- 
scription. ‘I never heard of such a thing! Keep 
close behind me, girls, and don’t make any noise. 
We'll find this intruder and cook his goose pro- 
perly.”’ 

The little party proceeded very quietly through 
the dark corridors toward the rotunda. The Em- 
press was cautious, but not intimidated. She car- 
ried a small flashlight in her hand, and ammunition 
for a plus-seven tongue-lashing in her head. She 
was angry, and nothing else but. The four co-eds 
were filled with glee. The plan was working beau- 
tifully, and, in the excitement, it took a lot of will- 
power to suppress the titter or giggle which wanted 
to get free. 


In the meantime, Fran’s crew had interviewed the 
surprised watchman. This was a grave matter, and 
one which he felt very strongly about. The idea 
of a man moving about in the dark in Pembina at 
one a.m.! It must be a man. He was a person of 
action, this watchman, and it did not take him long 
to decide on a course of procedure. 

“You girls can follow me if you like. But ['d 
advise you to go to your rooms. There may be 
some rough work on hand for me, and you'd only 
be in the road.’ With this he turned his back on 
the four and tip-toed down the hallway. And 
shortly behind him tip-toed the four. 

As the Empress neared the rotunda she stopped 
several times, and could hear quite distinctly the 
stealthy tread of someone on the stairway opposite. 
Her finger-nails bit into the palms of her hands. 
and her teeth were clenched tightly together. In 
the growing excitement her courage was not one 
whit diminished. She continued her quiet advance 
upon the unknown prowler. 

The four girls behind her also heard the noises 
on the other side, and were doubly delighted. 


The night-watchman was no fool, and his gum- 
shoe work was beyond reproach. The proverbial 
mouse could not have approached the scene more 
stealthily. He also stopped at intervals to listen, 
and was rewarded each time by hearing the sly 
movements of an unknown person nearby. He also 
had his coterie of four excited followers. 

The Empress and the watchman reached the op- 
posite sides of the rotunda at the same time. Both 
stopped to listen. All was quiet, except for the 
ticking of the big clock. First the one and then the 
other advanced a few steps toward the centre of the 
arena. Again a mutual pause. The suspense was 
becoming unbearable. 

With the next move, each could note the vague 
form of the other in the darkness. Two flashlights 
suddenly shot their searching rays upon two startled 
faces. 

“The Empress!" 

“The night-watchman!" 

In the darkness, eight merry voices were heard 
to chuckle, and twice as many feet went pattering 
down the corridors. 


THE DEPARTURE OF WINTER 
Once an old, old man was swaying 
Down the road through tarmpled snow, 
And I heard the children saying, 
“Old Man Winter, you must go.” 


Then a little boy came running; 
Snowbanks melted as he passed. 
Angry Winter heard him coming, 
Turned and blew a warning blast. 


Hesitating, foot uplifted, 

March stands rigid in the path, 

When the snowbanks round him shifted, 
Winter stumbled on in wrath. 


March, the mischief, followed after, 
Lifted high his sprinkling can. 

Then, with shrieks of mirth and laughter, 
Watched it soak the wicked man. 


Soon old Winter's form had vanished, 
Melted with the ice and snow. 

On the spot where he was vanquished 
Purple windflowers nod and glow. 


—Mollie A. Grant. 


IN A MOMENT OF DEPRESSION 


(With apologies to Tom Hood) 

With forehead furrowed with care, 
With eyelids heavy as lead, 
A teacher sat in his third-best rags, 
Plying a pencil red: 

Tests! Tests! Tests! 

Why did I give them that? 

What was the use of letting it loose— 

Pages and pages on any excusel 
And stil] with a voice of dolorous pitch, 
That sank to a moan and rose to a screech, 
He sang the song of that beastly pest, 
By giver and taker alike unblest, 
The song, in short, of the regular test! 


Tests! Tests! Tests! 
Another one through by a squeeze! 


LITERARY SUPPLEMENT 


PAGE FIFTEEN 


Tests! Tests! Tests! 

And they call this a life of ease! 

What the deuce is this slavery for ?-— 
Honolulu or Zanzibar, 

Tokio, Cuba or Bogota? — 

Dreams of a testless paradise! 

What's the use when | haven’t the price? 
Outside the window it’s ten below. 
Outside the window the wild winds blow. 
Howlers without and howlers within! 
Tests too thick and tests too thin! 
Saturday night and I meant to rest! 
Begin on another! Confound the test! 


Tests! Tests! Tests] 

One on another piled! 

And Tests! Tests! Tests! 

Oh, English undefiled! 

Sentences wrong end to— 

Headless, spineless, spent! 

Perfectly legal brew—— 

One and one-half per cent.! 

Why can't they write with a punch? 
Why can’t they think things out? 
Have they the ghost of a hunch 
What it is all about? 

Unity, Clearness, Force— 

Precepts futile and vain! 

Have to keep on, of course! 

Up and at it again! B. 


THE GARDEN 


The pale gold moon looked tenderly down on 
the little forgotten garden. The faint June breeze 
breathed on its crumbling walls and wild confusion 
of flowers. The warm air was perfumed with roses 
and the sweetness of a narcissi. A cherry-tree, that 
had blossomed late, bent over the stone basin of the 
fountain, long since dry, dreaming, perhaps, of days 
when its fair whiteness had a double in the pool, 
and when its petals, falling gently down, floated 
like fairy boats on the sparkling water. 

On a stone pedestal which stood between two 
sweeping birch-trees at the end of the garden lay 
a little faun, asleep. His cool white cheek was 
pillowed on his arm; his pan-pipes lay at his side 
where he had dropped them as he fell asleep. The 
climbing roses on the wall dropped long tendrils 
over him. A red rose brushed his head, and a 
red rose rested over his heart. He had slept thus 
for a hundred years, but whether he was imprisoned 
by a spell, or no, [ cannot tell. 

A cherry-blossom, wafted by the wind, dropped 
on his cheek, and as it touched him a faint flush 
rose on his face. He stirred and smiled in his sleep. 
The breeze moved the rose that rested on his head, 
and as it brushed across his eyes he awoke. But 
whether the breeze, the cherry-blossom and the rose 
had broken a spell, or no, I cannot tell. 

When the little faun opened his eyes he was not 
quite sure where he was. He lay gazing at the 
golden moon, the roses and the narcissi with half- 
closed eyes, the last reluctant wisps of lovely dreams 
floating across his mind. He rubbed one of his 
little pointed ears in a bewildered way, and sat up. 


As he did so his hand touched his pipes, and he 


PAGE SIXTEEN 


lifted them to his lips. Softly, gently, hesitatingly 
he blew upon them, searching for the hidden mem- 
ory of music. A low note, very quiet, suggestive 
of perfumes and flowers and vague beauty, yet very 
wistfully questioning withal, stole out into the night. 

The little gray mouse who lived in the wall came 
to her door with that wistful call ringing in her ears 
and tugging at her heart. A brown rabbit on his 
way to a patch of juicy young cabbage paused at 
a corner of the garden looking in through a large 
breach in the crumbling stone wall and wondering 
at that note of music. A little barn owl, as he flew 
in long graceful swoops, heard the faun's pipes, 
and hung in mid-air, waiting for a repetition of 
the call. 

But the faun paid no heed; that single questioning 
note had recalled a flood of pleasant memories— 
little wild strains of music, wind-haunted forest 
glades, sunny meadows and fragrant gardens. With 
his lips parted in a half-smile, his eyes raised to the 
pale gold moon, and the myriad perfumes of the 
garden in his nostrils, he sat waiting for the supreme 
memory which he knew must come. Suddenly, with 
a curiously exultant movement, he raised his pipes 
to his lips and began to play. It was a joyous lilt- 
ing tune he played, a mischievous, capering thing. 
All the joy of the world was given voice in that 
moment, the exultation of spring, the first robin's 
song, the laughter of brooks, the murmur of rivers 
and the whisper of wind among the trees. 

The little gray mouse stepped out of her door 
and crept toward the faun, drawn irresistibly by the 
magic of the song. The little brown rabbit jumped 


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THE GATEWAY 


through the breach in the crumbling wall and hop- 
ped softly towards the faun, oblivious of all save 
the sweetness of the music. The little barn ow] 
sailed gently down, not a beat of his wings breaking 
in on that wildest of songs. A pretty red fox on 
his way to a distant farm-yard turned from his path 
and obeying the mysterious call drew near to the 
faun. But the little piper played on unheedingly, 
Vague, lovely memories crowded his mind. All the 
while the red rose caressed his head, his soft child- 
like body swayed with the music, and his little 
shoulders brushed the violets at the foot of his pedes. 
tal. Still he played on, while a little circle of ani- 
mals sat spellbound before him, and the very nar- 
cissi leaned towards him. 

Then suddenly the flow of music stopped. The 
spell was broken. With a start, the little mouse 
discovered that she had been sitting between the 
fox and the owl, and rushed away in panic. The 
memory of those luscious cabbages assailed the 
rabbit, and the fox remembered a certain fat hen 
of which he knew. The faun leaned back against 
the wall. He was tired. The red rose brushed his 
eyes as he lay slowly down, pillowing his head on 
his arm. A shower of cherry-blossoms fell upon 
him, and he was asleep. 

The pale gold moon sailed on to the horizon. 
The trailing roses from the wall lay at the faun’s 
head and heart. The cherry-tree bent over the 
stone basin of the fountain, dropping her petals like 
tears for lost memories. The marble faun lay pale 
and cold between the weeping-birch trees. 

—Carman Dixon Craig. 


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